Surprising New Study Shows Cigarette Cravings Result From Habit, Not Addiction
Editor's ChoiceMain Category: Smoking / Quit Smoking
Also Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 15 Jul 2010 - 0:00 PDT
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4.86 (7 votes) |
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4.67 (3 votes) |
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Nicotine patches and gum are common - and often ineffective - ways of fighting cigarette cravings, as most smokers have discovered. Now a new study from Tel Aviv University shows why they're ineffective, and may provide the basis for more successful psychologically-based smoking cessation programs.
In the new study published in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Dr. Reuven Dar of Tel Aviv University's Department of Psychology found that the intensity of cravings for cigarettes had more to do with the psychosocial element of smoking than with the physiological effects of nicotine as an addictive chemical.
"These findings might not be popular with advocates of the nicotine addiction theory, because they undermine the physiological role of nicotine and emphasize mind over matter when it comes to smoking," Dr. Dar says. He hopes this research will help clinicians and health authorities develop more successful smoking cessation programs than those utilizing expensive nicotine patches or gum.
Up in the air
Dr. Dar and his colleagues' conclusions are based on two landmark studies. In the most recent study, he and his colleagues monitored the smoking behavior and craving levels of in-flight attendants, both women and men, who worked at the Israeli airline El Al. Each participant was monitored during two flights - a long flight of 10 to 13 hours in duration, from Tel Aviv to New York, for example; and a two-hop shorter trip from Israel to Europe and back, each leg lasting three to five hours. Using a questionnaire, he sampled craving levels of the attendants throughout the duration of their flights.
Dr. Dar and his colleagues found that the duration of the flight had no significant impact on craving levels, which were similar for short and long flights. Moreover, craving levels at the end of each short flight were much higher those at the end of the long flight, demonstrating that cravings increased in anticipation of the flight landing, whatever the flight's total duration. He concluded that the craving effect is produced by psychological cues rather than by the physiological effects of nicotine deprivation.
No smoking on the Sabbath
In an earlier 2005 study, Dr. Dar examined smokers who were religious Jews, forbidden by their religion to smoke on the Sabbath. He asked them about their smoking cravings on three separate days: the Sabbath, a regular weekday, and a weekday on which they'd been asked to abstain. Participants were interviewed at the end of each day about their craving levels during that day.
What Dr. Dar found is that cravings were very low on the morning of the Sabbath, when the smoker knew he would not be able to smoke for at least 10 hours. Craving levels gradually increased at the end of the Sabbath, when participants anticipated the first post-Sabbath cigarette. Craving levels on the weekday on which these people smoked as much as they wanted were just as high as on the day they abstained, showing that craving has little to do with nicotine deprivation.
Dr. Dar's studies conclude that nicotine is not addictive as physiological addictions are usually defined. While nicotine does have a physiological role in increasing cognitive abilities such as attention and memory, it's not an addictive substance like heroin, which creates true systemic and biologically-based withdrawal symptoms in the body of the user, he says.
Dr. Dar believes that people who smoke do so for short-term benefits like oral gratification, sensory pleasure and social camaraderie. Once the habit is established, people continue to smoke in response to cues and in situations that become associated with smoking. Dr. Dar believes that understanding smoking as a habit, not an addiction, will facilitate treatment. Smoking cessation techniques should emphasize the psychological and behavioral aspects of the habit and not the biological aspects, he suggests.
Source: American Friends of Tel Aviv University
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (4)
This may be due to nicotine's effects on learning.
posted by James Michael Howard on 15 Jul 2010 at 7:01 amI found these findings very interesting. Since nicotine improves learning, I suggest that these findings may represent learning of positive effects associated with smoking.
No need for any studies - Of course smokers are not addicted to nicotine
posted by Jane T on 15 Jul 2010 at 10:02 amWhat a waste of time these 'studies' are.
Of course smokers are not addicted to nicotine. If that was the whole story then NRT would work instead of being over 98% ineffectual.
Why didn't someone think to ask a smoker ?
People smoke because it is a pleasant experience and they do not want to stop.
They are being bullied into stopping smoking by fanatical health zealots.
These zealots cannot bear to see someone enjoying something that they themselves get no pleasure from.
no nicotine withdrawal
posted by Rory Mays on 19 Jul 2010 at 6:43 pmI smoked for 40 years. Quitting was as hard as anything I have ever done. There was absolutely no nicotine withdrawal; just the extraordinary urge to smoke due to habit and taste. Perhaps some do become addicted, but I experienced zero anticipated discomfort. If anyone should have withdrawn, it should have been a 40 year smoker. I did use Chantix, but it does not cure withdrawal discomfort, so I was told !
au contraire
posted by Keen Observer on 21 Jul 2010 at 10:47 pmRE: "These zealots cannot bear to see someone enjoying something that they themselves get no pleasure from."
Do you believe this? Seriously? If you put aside your selfish indignation you might consider that many non-smokers are simply tired of paying for the overwhelming healthcare and damage cost, and enduring the messes that result from other people's (elective) bad habits.
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