Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit

Limited empirical work has been done to compare the effects that health knowledge and advice from doctors have on smokers’ intentions to quit. This paper examines the association of smokers’ intentions to quit with health knowledge, advice from doctors, and self-perceived health. A sample of 2509 sm...

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Main Authors: He, Tianfeng, Liu, Lefan, Huang, Jing, Li, Guoxing, Guo, Xinbiao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65090/
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author He, Tianfeng
Liu, Lefan
Huang, Jing
Li, Guoxing
Guo, Xinbiao
author_facet He, Tianfeng
Liu, Lefan
Huang, Jing
Li, Guoxing
Guo, Xinbiao
author_sort He, Tianfeng
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Limited empirical work has been done to compare the effects that health knowledge and advice from doctors have on smokers’ intentions to quit. This paper examines the association of smokers’ intentions to quit with health knowledge, advice from doctors, and self-perceived health. A sample of 2509 smokers aged 15–69 years old in Ningbo was used from China’s National Health Literacy Surveillance survey, conducted in 2018 and 2019. Respondents were asked whether they agree smoking causes stroke, heart attack, lung cancer; and heart diseases in adults, lung illnesses in children, and lung cancer in adults, by secondhand smoke, respectively. Using the logistic model, we found that knowing that smoking causes stroke and lung cancer more than doubles the odds of one’s intention to quit (OR = 2.705, p < 0.01), the effect of which is much greater than knowing that smoking causes lung cancer only (OR = 1.795, p < 0.01). Doctors’ advice to quit is more important than health knowledge, in terms of predicting smokers’ past cessation behaviours. In addition, smokers’ self-perceived health is negatively associated with their decisions to quit. This paper highlights that more resources should be directed towards training health care providers to advise smokers to quit, which might be more effective than health education alone.
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spelling nottingham-650902021-04-12T06:34:32Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65090/ Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit He, Tianfeng Liu, Lefan Huang, Jing Li, Guoxing Guo, Xinbiao Limited empirical work has been done to compare the effects that health knowledge and advice from doctors have on smokers’ intentions to quit. This paper examines the association of smokers’ intentions to quit with health knowledge, advice from doctors, and self-perceived health. A sample of 2509 smokers aged 15–69 years old in Ningbo was used from China’s National Health Literacy Surveillance survey, conducted in 2018 and 2019. Respondents were asked whether they agree smoking causes stroke, heart attack, lung cancer; and heart diseases in adults, lung illnesses in children, and lung cancer in adults, by secondhand smoke, respectively. Using the logistic model, we found that knowing that smoking causes stroke and lung cancer more than doubles the odds of one’s intention to quit (OR = 2.705, p < 0.01), the effect of which is much greater than knowing that smoking causes lung cancer only (OR = 1.795, p < 0.01). Doctors’ advice to quit is more important than health knowledge, in terms of predicting smokers’ past cessation behaviours. In addition, smokers’ self-perceived health is negatively associated with their decisions to quit. This paper highlights that more resources should be directed towards training health care providers to advise smokers to quit, which might be more effective than health education alone. MDPI AG 2021-03-31 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65090/1/Health%20knowledge%20about%20smoking%2C%20role%20of%20doctors%2C%20and%20self-perceived%20health.pdf He, Tianfeng, Liu, Lefan, Huang, Jing, Li, Guoxing and Guo, Xinbiao (2021) Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18 (7). p. 3629. ISSN 1660-4601 health knowledge; smoking caused disease; secondhand smoke; cessation; intention to quit; low/middle income country http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18073629 doi:10.3390/ijerph18073629 doi:10.3390/ijerph18073629
spellingShingle health knowledge; smoking caused disease; secondhand smoke; cessation; intention to quit; low/middle income country
He, Tianfeng
Liu, Lefan
Huang, Jing
Li, Guoxing
Guo, Xinbiao
Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit
title Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit
title_full Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit
title_fullStr Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit
title_full_unstemmed Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit
title_short Health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit
title_sort health knowledge about smoking, role of doctors, and self-perceived health: a cross-sectional study on smokers’ intentions to quit
topic health knowledge; smoking caused disease; secondhand smoke; cessation; intention to quit; low/middle income country
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65090/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65090/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65090/