Posted on 09/19/2002 9:26:42 AM PDT by Tumbleweed_Connection
With a little help from their spouses, even the most stubborn of smokers can quit, study findings show.
Researchers found that middle-aged smokers married to other smokers--generally among the most unwilling to kick the habit--are more likely to quit when both spouses make the attempt together.
Past research has highlighted the importance of a supportive spouse during a smoker's quit attempt. The new study shows that for both men and women, having a smoking spouse join them in the attempt may boost the odds of its success--regardless of other factors that affect smokers' ability to kick the habit, such as age, income and education.
Middle-aged smokers married to the same may be the toughest to convince of the benefits of giving up smoking, having long resisted the numerous health arguments for quitting. But a spouse's willingness to quit, along with growing concerns about health in old age, may be what some of these smokers need, according to the study authors, led by Dr. Melissa M. Franks of Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan.
They reported their findings in a recent issue of the Journal of Aging and Health.
In the study, the researchers followed nearly 1,400 married smokers in the US between 1992 and 1994. Of the 450 married pairs of smokers in 1992, the large majority were still smoking 2 years later. But in just over 5% of these couples, both spouses quit during the study. And, the researchers report, having a spouse who quit had a "large effect" on the odds that a smoker, man or woman, would quit.
According to Franks and her colleagues, such combined quit efforts may help by removing "smoking cues" from the home or by boosting spouses' support for each other. And a spouse who's trying to quit may also pester his or her smoking spouse more.
However, the researchers point out, although this study found a "potential incentive" for married smokers to quit, it also found that most of these smokers remain stubborn in their habit.

Well, it didn't work for my parents. My father had quit, but had already contracted lung cancer. He quit in the fall of '77 and died in June '78. My mother never stopped smoking even after he died. She contracted lung cancer in May of '90 and died just three months later. She never stopped smoking until she landed in the hospital just prior to her death. Even when she was on oxygen, she'd take the mask off, go outside in the hallway of her apt. building and sneak a smoke.
I grew up in a family of smokers. My two sisters and brother all smoked. I was the only one who never took up the habit, and I thank my lucky stars every day. I'm a Pepsi-holic though.
Smokers More Likely to Quit if Spouse Dies
I was expecting a very different thread than this.
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