Perspectives of smokers, smokeless tobacco users and cessation practitioners in India: A qualitative study

Miriam Sequeira, Felix Naughton, Richard Velleman, Pratima Murthy, Joseline D'souza, Marimilha Grace Pacheco, Amita Kenkre Kamat, Akshatha Gadiyar, Vinita Sanjeevan, Latika Jain, Abhijit Nadkarni

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Abstract

Introduction: India is the second largest consumer of tobacco in the world and accounts for 70% of global deaths due to smokeless tobacco (SLT) use. AIM: The aim of this study is to understand the perspectives of tobacco users (smokers and SLT users) and practitioners in India to inform cessation interventions.

Method: Semi-structured in-depth interviews with tobacco users (smoked and smokeless; n=23), and healthcare practitioners (n=13). Perspectives were triangulated using thematic analysis to examine convergence, divergence and complementarity of findings.

Results: We present the results in a socio-ecological framework to highlight reasons for initiation and continuation of tobacco and motives to quit at the individual, interpersonal, occupational, societal and policy levels. SLT is seen as culturally acceptable compared to smoked forms of tobacco. Emotionally framed messages highlighting negative effects of tobacco on loved ones were perceived to be a better motivator than other types of cessation messages.

Discussion: Nuanced differences exist between smokers and SLT user perspectives which have implications for cessation programs. Our findings supplement similar studies with other South Asian populations.

Implications for Practice: Our study provides useful insights to tailor cessation interventions to the type of tobacco consumed in order to enhance their acceptability and effectiveness.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)194-200
Number of pages7
JournalArchives of Psychiatric Nursing
Volume51
Early online date4 Jul 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2024

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