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KMID : 0806120070370071159
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2007 Volume.37 No. 7 p.1159 ~ p.1165
Stages of Change in Smoking Cessation and Factors Related to Re-smoking after Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery
Choi Seung-Hee

Song Kyung-Ja
Choi-Kwon Smi
Abstract
Purpose:The purpose of this study was to investigate the stages of change in smoking cessation after a Coronary Artery Bypass Graft(CABG) and to identify the related factors.

Methods:The subjects (n=157) were patients who underwent a CABG in a university hospital from March 1998 to October 2005 and were smokers before the CABG. Data was collected viachart review and a telephone interview, and analyzed with descriptive statistics, ¥ö2 test, one-way ANOVA, and Kruskal-Wallis procedure by the SPSS/PC win 12.0 program.

Results:The subjects smoked for an average of 34 years (21¡¡cigarettes per day) before surgery. Eleven percent of the subjects were in pre-contemplation, 6.4% in contemplation, 13.5% in preparation, 4.5% in action, and 64.5% in the maintenance stage. Nicotine dependence and selfefficacy were different among the groups with different stages of change in smoking cessation. Nicotine dependence was the lowest (p=0.00) and self-efficacy was the highest (p=0.00) in the maintenance stage. The number of subjects in pre- contemplation and contemplation significantly increased 6 years after surgery(p=0.05)£®

Conclusion:To implement effective smoking cessation interventions for CABG patients, the intervention should be developed to accommodate individual readiness for smoking cessation, especially so for those who had a CABG more than 6 years previously.
KEYWORD
Smoking cessation, Coronary artery bypass graft, CABG, Nicotine dependence, Self-efficacy
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