Tailored quit-smoking programs are designed to address the risks associated with comorbidity in individuals living with HIV.
The correlation between high smoking rates among individuals with HIV and the prevalence of comorbid health issues is influenced by factors such as gender, race/ethnicity, and socioeconomic status (1✔ ✔Trusted Source
Prevalence and Correlates of Cardiovascular, Pulmonary, Cancer, and Mental Health Comorbidities Among Adults With HIV Who Smoke
Go to source). "Understanding the characteristics of people with HIV who smoke and have comorbidities may inform the development of smoking cessation interventions for groups who are likely to have a difficult time quitting smoking," comments lead author Jessica L. Elf, PhD, of Colorado State University, Fort Collins.
Mental Health Comorbidity Among Smokers with HIV
To clarify the types of comorbidities among people with HIV who smoke have, as well as the characteristics associated with that group, the researchers analyzed data from an ongoing follow-up study of people with HIV living in the Washington, DC area (the DC Cohort Longitudinal HIV Study). Of nearly 8,600 participants enrolled in the study, 50% were smokers.‘Individuals living with HIV who engage in smoking face a heightened vulnerability to concurrent physical and mental health conditions. #smoking #HIV #AIDS’
In the DC Cohort, people with HIV who smoked were predominantly young (57% younger than 50 years), male (71%), and non-Hispanic Black (85%). About three-fourths were unemployed, and only 15% had private health insurance. The study focused on comorbidity from mental health problems and from cardiovascular disease, pulmonary disease, or cancer (CPC comorbidity). Overall, more than half (54%) of smokers with HIV had some type of comorbid health condition. This included a mental health disorder in 49% of participants. Rates of CPC comorbidity were four percent for cardiovascular disease, eight percent for cancer, and two percent for pulmonary disease.
Comorbidity was to a wide range of demographic and socioeconomic factors among people with HIV who smoked. Those with mental health comorbidity were more likely to be older, white, and female; to be on public health insurance or uninsured; and to have unstable housing conditions.
Risk of CPC comorbidity was strongly associated with older age, female sex, and non-Hispanic Black race/ethnicity. Comorbid CPC was also linked to unstable housing, but not to other sociodemographic factors.
Comorbidity was also increased for participants with poorer clinical characteristics: AIDS diagnosis, lower CD4+ cell count, and high viral load. These associations were stronger for CPC than for mental health comorbidity. Substance use did not appear to affect comorbidity risks.
Advertisement
Advertisement
"We need to prioritize the development of effective smoking cessation strategies for people with HIV who smoke and have concurrent smoking-related mental and physical health problems," Dr. Elf adds. "Our findings highlight the need for special attention to higher-risk characteristics such as lower socioeconomic status, female gender, and minority race/ethnicity."
Reference:
- Prevalence and Correlates of Cardiovascular, Pulmonary, Cancer, and Mental Health Comorbidities Among Adults With HIV Who Smoke - (https://journals.lww.com/janac/Abstract/2023/08000/Prevalence_and_Correlates_of_Cardiovascular,.4.aspx)