Publication | Open Access
Smokers With Behavioral Health Comorbidity Should Be Designated a Tobacco Use Disparity Group
134
Citations
60
References
2013
Year
Tobacco CessationSubstance UseTobacco IndustryHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthSubstance Use DisordersTobacco ControlPriority PopulationNicotinePublic HealthHealth PolicyPsychiatryTobacco UseHealth PromotionDisparity GroupHealth ConditionsSubstance AbuseAddictionHealth BehaviorTobacco PolicyBehavioral HealthMedicine
Smokers with co-occurring mental illness or substance use disorders are not designated a disparity group or priority population by most national public health and tobacco control groups. These smokers fulfill the criteria commonly used to identify groups that merit special attention: targeted marketing by the tobacco industry, high smoking prevalence rates, heavy economic and health burdens from tobacco, limited access to treatment, and longer durations of smoking with less cessation. A national effort to increase surveillance, research, and treatment is needed. Designating smokers with behavioral health comorbidity a priority group will bring much-needed attention and resources. The disparity in smoking rates among persons with behavioral health issues relative to the general population will worsen over time if their needs remain unaddressed.
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