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Anxiety Sensitivity and Tobacco Use: A Transdiagnostic Approach

Authors

Aonso-Diego, Gema , Ruz, M , FERNÁNDEZ ARTAMENDI, SERGIO, Ruiz, Manuel J. , LÓPEZ NUÑEZ, CARLA

External publication

No

Means

Clin. Salud

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

2.3

SJR Impact

0.503

Publication date

29/05/2023

ISI

000940106100001

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-85153607621

Abstract

Background: In recent years, several studies have found a relationship between transdiagnostic variables, such as anxiety sensitivity (AS) and tobacco use and smoking cessation. Method: In this line, the aim was twofold: 1) to analyze sex differences in variables related to tobacco and AS and 2) to examine the mediating effect of AS. For this purpose, the sample consisted of 340 smokers (M (age) = 33.59 years, SD = 11.98, 68.5% women). Results: The results showed that men smoked more cigarettes per day and women had higher levels of total, physical, and cognitive AS. The structural equation model confirmed that AS is a mediator variable between the number of cigarettes per day and nicotine dependence, and the number of previous cessation attempts. Conclusions: These findings suggest that transdiagnostic variables, such as AS, and sex differences, must be taken into account in smoking cessation interventions.

Keywords

Tobacco; Anxiety sensitivity; Smoking cessation; Transdiagnostic approach; Sex differences