Depressed smokers who go for mood management treatments may find it easier to quit the habit, according to a new research.
Studies have shown that people with depression are about twice as likely to smoke cigarettes as people without depression and they are less likely to successfully quit than smokers without depression.
A new evidence review in The Cochrane Library found that depressed smokers may stop smoking longer and benefit overall from mood management interventions after they quit smoking.
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The researchers studied 49 randomised controlled trials, including 33 trials that focused on smoking cessation with a mood management element for those with current or past depression.
The analysis compared both smoking cessation programmes using psychosocial interventions, like counselling or exercise,
and those using bupropion, an antidepressant to standard non-smoking programmes.
When psychosocial components were added, smokers were able to stop smoking for longer periods. While bupropion was effective for those with a history of depression, it was not found to be effective for smokers with current depression.
Gregory L Kirk, director of Rocky Mountain Psychiatry Consultants, LLC in Denver, who agreed with the review's findings, emphasised that smokers with depression, past or present, have more medical problems from smoking and higher death rates from smoking-related illnesses.
"In a standard smoking cessation programme, people with depression are more likely to have negative mood changes from nicotine withdrawal, but the non-depressed group can experience mood states as well," Kirk said.
"But when depressed smokers quit, depression symptoms may actually improve. This makes it all the more critical to understand this high-risk group of smokers and what helps them quit tobacco," he said.