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Depression and smoking cessation: Does the evidence support psychiatric practice?

Authors Anna Lembke, Kenasha Johnson, Charles DeBattista

Published 15 September 2007 Volume 2007:3(4) Pages 487—493



Anna Lembke, Kenasha Johnson, Charles DeBattista

Department of Psychiatry, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

Abstract: Depression and smoking are highly comorbid. The vast majority of psychiatrists treating depressed patients do not target or treat nicotine dependence, and many inpatient psychiatric facilities implicitly condone smoking by providing ‘smoke breaks’. The reasons for failure to treat are unclear, but are probably linked to the notion that depressed smokers are neither willing nor able to quit, and will become more depressed if they try. We review the clinical evidence on depression and smoking cessation, and find little support for current psychiatric practice. Although quitting smoking does appear to pose a risk for the development of depression, this risk is not clearly higher in those with a past history of depression than those without. Depressed smokers are as capable as nondepressed smokers of quitting smoking, and at least one-quarter of depressed smokers is willing to try. Sustained abstinence may even lead to improvement in depressive disorders. More research is needed to understand the relationship between depression and quitting smoking, but current clinical evidence suggests more resiliency among depressed smokers than common clinical wisdom would dictate.

Keywords: depression, smoking cessation, psychiatry, nicotine dependence, withdrawal