359370

Smoking and its psychiatric comorbidity among a sample of inpatients in a general hospital in Cairo

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Last updated: 05 Jan 2025

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Abstract

Objectives
This study aimed at estimating the prevalence of smoking in patients who were admitted to departments of neurology, chest, oncology, and general surgery of a general hospital in Cairo over a 6-month period. It also aimed at determining the relationship between smoking, stress, anxiety, depression, and personality characteristics in those patients.
Patients and methods
A selective sample comprising patients who were admitted to departments of neurology, chest, oncology, and general surgery of a general hospital in Cairo every Tuesday over a 6-month period was included in the study. The patients were fully conscious and cooperative; their ages ranged from 18 to 60 years. The patients were classified into four categories: current, past, passive, and nonsmokers. The Smoking Questionnaire, The Symptom Checklist-90-R, the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire, the Social Readjusting Rating Scale, the Beck Anxiety Scale, and the Beck Depression Inventory were used.
Results
Most of the patients (64%) were admitted to neurology or chest departments (32.7 and 31.3%, respectively). The smoking groups (current and past smokers) showed a male predominance (90 and 93.1%, respectively) in comparison with passive smokers and nonsmokers (60 and 61.3%, respectively). Most of the current smokers belonged to the ‘mild anxiety’ and ‘severe anxiety’ categories (70 and 26%, respectively). Among the past smokers, 58.6% had mild anxiety, 27.6% had severe anxiety, and 13.8% had low anxiety. Eighty percent of current smokers had mild and moderate depression (62 and 18%, respectively), and 69% of past smokers had mild and moderate depression (55.2 and 13.8%, respectively), with a high statistical significance (Po0.001). Most of the current smokers had mild or severe stress (54 and 28%, respectively), whereas most passive and nonsmokers had normal stress levels (55 and 61.3%, respectively). Current and passive smokers showed the highest mean levels on the symptom checklist (2.788±0.467 and 2.825±0.426, respectively). Similarly, the highest mean levels of psychoticism were reported among current smokers (18.78±3.259). The highest mean level of neuroticism was reported among current smokers (19.46±2.032).
Conclusion
Current smokers have higher anxiety, depression, stress, and psychoticism personality characteristics.

DOI

10.7123/01.EJP.0000429453.41801.4c

Keywords

personality, psychiatric comorbidity, Smoking

Authors

First Name

Momtaz Abdel

Last Name

Wahab

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First Name

Mohamed Nasr

Last Name

Eldin

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First Name

Mona

Last Name

El rakhawy

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First Name

Heba

Last Name

Fathy

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First Name

Maged

Last Name

Aladrosy

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First Name

Dalia

Last Name

Enaba

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First Name

Hassan Seif

Last Name

Eleslam

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Volume

34

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

48326

Issue Date

2014-05-01

Receive Date

2012-12-10

Publish Date

2014-05-27

Print ISSN

1110-1105

Online ISSN

2090-2425

Link

https://ejpsy.journals.ekb.eg/article_359370.html

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https://ejpsy.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=359370

Order

359,370

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Journal of Psychiatry

Publication Link

https://ejpsy.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Smoking and its psychiatric comorbidity among a sample of inpatients in a general hospital in Cairo

Details

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Article

Created At

18 Dec 2024