Smoking cessation for improving mental health

No SJR dataMar 9, 2021The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Quitting smoking and its impact on mental health

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Abstract

Smoking cessation is associated with improvements in mental health symptoms in over 169,500 participants across 102 studies.

  • Smoking cessation is linked to a reduction in anxiety symptoms (standardized mean difference -0.28) compared to continuing to smoke.
  • Improvements in depression symptoms were observed with smoking cessation (standardized mean difference -0.30), although evidence quality is very low.
  • Mixed anxiety and depression symptoms showed a similar association with smoking cessation (standardized mean difference -0.31) and moderate evidence quality.
  • Secondary outcomes indicated smoking cessation may improve stress symptoms (standardized mean difference -0.19) and positive affect (standardized mean difference 0.22).
  • Quitting smoking appears to lower the incidence of new mixed anxiety and depression (odds ratio 0.76) and anxiety disorders (odds ratio 0.61).
  • No significant association was found between smoking cessation and social quality of life, with results suggesting a potential small improvement.

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