A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Changes in Smoking During Retirement Transition: A Longitudinal Cohort Study




AuthorsPulakka A, Halonen JI, Pentti J, Kivimäki M, Vahtera J, Stenholm S

Publication year2019

JournalScandinavian Journal of Public Health

Journal name in sourceScandinavian journal of public health

Journal acronymScand J Public Health

Volume47

Issue8

First page 876

Last page884

Number of pages9

ISSN1403-4948

eISSN1651-1905

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1403494818804408

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/37580465


Abstract

We examined the effect of retirement transition on changes in smoking, identified trajectories of smoking around the retirement transition, and investigated factors predicting the membership in the trajectories.\nThis longitudinal cohort study included 1,432 current or former smokers who entered into statutory retirement in 2000-2011 and who filled out two to four questionnaires sent at four-year intervals. Effect of retirement on smoking was analysed as a non-randomized pseudo-trial in which we compared the likelihood of quitting and relapsing smoking between two subsequent survey waves among those who retired and did not retire. We used latent class analysis to identify trajectories of smoking status and smoking intensity (low: <10 cigarettes/day or high: ⩾10 cigarettes/day), and multinomial logistic regression models to assess pre-retirement factors associated with smoking trajectories.
Retirement transition was associated with 1.7-fold odds of quitting smoking (95% confidence intervals 1.3-2.2) compared with no retirement transition. We identified three smoking status trajectories: 'sustained non-smoking' (61% of the participants), 'sustained smoking' (23%) and 'decreasing smoking' (16%). For 489 baseline smokers, we identified three smoking intensity trajectories: 'sustained high intensity smoking' (32% of the participants), 'sustained low intensity smoking' (32%) and 'decreasing high intensity smoking' (35%). Living outside an inner urban area predicted membership in the 'decreasing smoking' versus 'sustained smoking' trajectory.
Smokers are more likely to quit smoking during transition to retirement than before or after it. Characteristics of the smoking environment may affect smoking behaviour around retirement.


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Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 17:47