Publication | Closed Access
Long-term use of nicotine chewing gum. Occurrence, determinants, and effect on weight gain.
94
Citations
25
References
1988
Year
Tobacco CessationTobacco ControlNutritionSubstance AbuseSubstance UseLong-term UseTobacco UseAddictionNicotineOral HygieneSmokers Clinic2-Mg NicotinePublic HealthWeight GainLong-term Gum UsersHealth Sciences
Among 538 clients of a Smokers Clinic who were treated with 2-mg nicotine chewing gum, 34 (6.3%) were still using the gum at one-year follow-up. This group represented 25% of lapse-free abstainers. At one-year follow-up, long-term gum users were using an average of 6.8 pieces of gum per day. Long-term gum users were similar to treatment failures in cigarette consumption and tobacco dependence, while "gum-free" successes were significantly lighter and less-dependent smokers. Long-term gum users used more gum during the four weeks of treatment than treatment failures, who in turn used more than the gum-free successes. It is suggested that for many the long-term use of gum was an essential ingredient of their success. Long-term gum users gained significantly less weight than other long-term treatment successes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1