Latest News

Here’s how to help Black smokers quit


 

Black Americans attempt to quit smoking more often than their White counterparts but are less likely to succeed, and they pay the health consequences.

This knowledge has driven Kevin Choi, MD, acting scientific director of the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities in Bethesda, Md., to dedicate his career to studying the patterns and disparities of smoking among these patients.

Dr. Choi wants primary care clinicians to know not just that they have the potential to educate patients on the harms of smoking – most patients already know smoking is unhealthy – but that aiding them will likely necessitate more assertive follow-up.

To do so, “we need to understand the bigger backdrop of racial and sociological stress experienced by the Black population, which stems from both interpersonal and structural racism,” Dr. Choi said.

Not only are Black smokers more likely to try to quit, but they also tend to smoke fewer cigarettes per day than other racial groups. Yet they experience higher rates of smoking-related mortality.

The reasons behind the attempts

Multiple factors play into Black smokers’ lower rates of successful quitting attempts than Asian, Hispanic, White, and Native American individuals.

One reason: An estimated 85% of Black smokers smoke highly addictive menthol cigarettes. According to Dr. Choi and other experts, the tobacco industry engages in targeted marketing of menthols by sponsoring community events in predominantly Black neighborhoods and colleges with historically Black populations and by using Black culture in advertising.

“The built environment really drives a change in behavior, and we have seen that chronically in the African American population being overly targeted and now being overly addicted to nicotine,” said Daniel Kortsch, MD, a family medicine physician and chair of the Tobacco Cessation Workgroup at Denver Health.

Menthol cigarettes are more addictive than traditional cigarettes, in part because they provide a less harsh feeling in the respiratory system, owing to anti-tussive, anti-irritant, and cooling properties that act as a cough suppressant and mask irritation and pain.

“You do not feel like you’re smoking that much or that it’s dangerous, and that’s exactly the reason why it’s harder to quit,” said Julia Adamian, MD, section chief of general internal medicine and clinical innovation at NYU Langone Tisch Hospital.

In addition, menthol cigarettes interact with the body in complex ways that make quitting harder, according to a study published in Nicotine & Tobacco Research. Menthol increases the amount of nicotine that the body absorbs and thus increases the risk of dependence on the drug.

According to Dr. Choi, rates of cigar and cigarillo use are higher among Black Americans, compared with other races, and these products are often left out of cessation programs. Smokers, regardless of race, may have a misguided belief that cigars and cigarillos are less harmful than cigarettes.

Research published in 2021 found that Black cigar smokers who were interested in cessation had not been asked by their health care provider if they smoked cigars, and those who were asked reported a lack of support for cessation.

Primary care providers should work to remove any misconceptions a patient has regarding the safety of cigarillos and cigars, Dr. Choi said.

These smokers are also at a disadvantage regarding cessation success because of the neighborhoods they may live in, according to Dr. Choi. Black Americans are more likely to earn less and to live in neighborhoods with lower housing values than other racial groups. Areas with more low-income households tend to have a higher density of tobacco outlets.

“If you’re trying to quit smoking, but you walk by three, four, or five gas stations, convenience stores, and other tobacco outlets with signs that advertise sales, it’s not going to make quitting easy,” Dr. Choi said.

Pages

Next Article: