Publication | Open Access
Comparing Homeless Smokers to Economically Disadvantaged Domiciled Smokers
43
Citations
35
References
2013
Year
Substance UseDomiciled SmokersHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthTobacco ControlSocial HealthPublic HealthHealth SciencesHousingHomeless SmokersPublic PolicyMore SmokersPsychiatryTobacco UseHealth EquitySubstance AbuseHealth EconomicsAddictionHealth BehaviorVulnerable PopulationTobacco PolicyBehavioral HealthSubstance AddictionMedicineHomelessness
We compared characteristics of homeless smokers and economically disadvantaged domiciled smokers (Dallas, TX; August 2011-November 2012). Although findings indicated similar smoking characteristics across samples, homeless smokers (n = 57) were exposed to more smokers and reported lower motivation to quit, lower self-efficacy for quitting, more days with mental health problems, and greater exposure to numerous stressors than domiciled smokers (n = 110). The sample groups reported similar scores on measures of affect, perceived stress, and interpersonal resources. Results may inform novel cessation interventions for homeless smokers.
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