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Journal Article

Citation

Stefanovics EA, Potenza MN, Pietrzak RH. J. Affect. Disord. 2020; 274: 354-362.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jad.2020.04.005

PMID

32469827

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Smoking and obesity are major public health concerns, though little is known about the mental and physical health burden of co-occurring obesity and smoking.
METHODS: Using a nationally representative sample of U.S. military veterans, we examined the prevalence of mental and physical co-morbidities, physical and mental functioning, and quality of life between obese only; smoking only; and obese smokers.
RESULTS: Among current smokers, 31.7% were obese; among obese veterans, 16.4% were current smokers; and in the total sample, 5.4% were obese and current smokers. Relative to the obese-only group, obese smokers were more likely to be younger, male, non-white, non-married, unemployed and VA-served, and have lower household incomes. These also reported higher levels of perceived stress and trauma and were more likely to endorsed current suicidal ideation and lifetime suicide attempts (odds ratio [OR]=2.0), medical (2.3<=OR<=3.9) and psychiatric (1.5<=OR<=2.9) comorbidities, and lower overall health status and quality of life. Compared to the smoking-only group, obese smokers were more likely to endorse current suicidal ideation (OR=2.0) and nicotine dependence (OR=1.5), and reported poorer physical health and overall quality of life. Analyses were adjusted for sociodemographic and military characteristics.
LIMITATIONS: The cross-sectional study design precludes causal inference.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that co-occurring obesity and smoking is associated with substantial mental and physical health burden in U.S. veterans. Collectively, they underscore the importance of multicomponent interventions targeting, obesity, smoking, and co-occurring issues, such as trauma and internalizing disorders, in this population.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Cross-Sectional Studies; United States; Male; Suicidal Ideation; Quality of Life; Obesity; Veterans; Smoking; Co-morbidity

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