More 60-Second Science
It’s not news that tobacco’s bad for your health—nearly half a million Americans die from tobacco-related illnesses every year. And among people who abuse drugs and alcohol, more than three-quarters use tobacco, which means tobacco is still the leading killer of the drug-dependent, not hard drugs.
So instituting a tobacco ban at rehab centers would seem like a no-brainer. But it’s not so clear cut, according to a study of an Ohio center for addiction treatment. The center imposed a smoking ban. And in the following months, the number of users who completed rehab dropped nearly in half. In addition, both smokers and non-smokers stuck with the program for fewer days than they had before the ban. That study appears in the Journal of Social Work Practice in the Addictions. [Gretchen Clark Hammond and Thomas Gregoire, "Breaking Ground in Treating Tobacco Dependence at a Women's Treatment Center"]
The researchers aren’t discouraging treatment centers from trying tobacco bans. Because previous studies do indicate that quitting tobacco and hard drugs at the same time ups the odds patients will stay clean in the long run. But as this study points out, even a well-meaning ban on tobacco may sometimes push away the very people who treatment centers are trying to help.
—Christopher Intagliata
[The above text is an exact transcript of this podcast.]



Listen to this Podcast
See what we're tweeting about




3 Comments
Add CommentThis is also true for mental hospitals. I did an article on this when they banned smoking in hospitals except for psychiatric wards in New York. Not they banned it there too. Tough for long-term patients and schizophrenic whose only communication with other patients was through bargaining for cigarettes. I have never smoked and believe smoking should be banned in all hospitals. However, I know it must be tough to be admitted to a mental hospital have to deal with that and give up smoking. It also confuses the staff as coming off nicotine addiction causes many mental symptoms as well.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisThe people who work at addiction centers deserve a smoke free workplace. The writer should have thought twice before writing this article.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisAs usual black and white solutions are less. Many Centers provide outside areas, away from non-smokers and staff, that still allow enough access to the "other" addiction while providing a safe place for all to breathe.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this