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What is the right thing at the right time? Interactions between stages and processes of change among smokers who make a quit attempt

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 04:26 authored by C Segan, Robert Borland, Ken Greenwood
C. A. Perz, C. C. DiClemente, and J. P. Carbonari (1996) claim support for the transtheoretical model notion that success in smoking cessation involves doing the right thing at the right time: emphasising experiential change processes during the contemplation and preparation stages and shifting to behavioral process activities during action. A key methodological limitation of Perz et al. was their failure to control for stage of change, a measure that has been shown to be predictive of cessation. This study replicates the prospective findings of Perz et al. in a different data set, then controls for stage of change when it is predictive of cessation, and finds that the measures of "appropriate" change process use developed by Perz et al. no longer predict cessation. The authors conclude that stage of change, in particular the distinction between smoking and not smoking, is more important than change process use in predicting cessation outcomes.

History

Journal

Health Psychology

Volume

23

Start page

86

End page

93

Total pages

8

Publisher

APA Journals

Place published

United States

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006003806

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-12-22

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