Emotional dysregulation among English-speaking Hispanic persons who smoke living in the United states

Addict Behav. 2024 May:152:107959. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2024.107959. Epub 2024 Jan 22.

Abstract

Hispanic/Latinx (hereafter Hispanic) individuals in the United States (US) experience serious tobacco-related disparities and factors contributing to such disparities need to be adequately identified and clinically addressed. Emotion dysregulation is a key transdiagnostic relevant to smoking. The present cross-sectional investigation sought to test if emotion dysregulation was related to more severe problems during smoking quit attempts (e.g., irritability, weight gain), perceptions of difficulty about quitting, as well as negative and positive beliefs about smoking abstinence in a sample of English-speaking Hispanic adults residing in the US who smoke. Participants included 332 Hispanic adults who engaged in daily cigarette smoking (35.46 years old, 37 % identified as female). Emotion dysregulation was significantly related to more severe problems when quitting and perceived barriers for quitting, as well as negative beliefs about smoking abstinence. Additionally, emotion dysregulation was significantly and negatively related to positive outcomes about smoking abstinence. The amount of change in the various smoking criterion variables accounted for by emotion dysregulation was small (sr2 range: 0.028-0.085), but evident in adjusted models that accounted for a wide range of factors (e.g., depression, drug use severity). Overall, this investigation found consistent empirical evidence that individual differences in emotion dysregulation in Hispanic individuals were associated with several clinically significant smoking processes, suggesting this construct may represent an important factor involved in the maintenance and relapse of smoking among this ethnic population.

Keywords: Barriers for quitting; Cognition; Emotion dysregulation; Hispanic/Latinx; Negative mood; Smoking abstinence expectancies; Smoking cessation; Tobacco.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Cigarette Smoking*
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Emotions*
  • Ethnicity
  • Female
  • Hispanic or Latino* / psychology
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Smoking
  • United States / epidemiology