Study Links Workplace Factors with Smoking Behaviors by Janelle Ringer - City News Group, Inc.

Community Calendar

FEBRUARY
S M T W T F S
01 02 03 04 05 06 07
08 09 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
View Events
Submit Events

Study Links Workplace Factors with Smoking Behaviors

By Janelle Ringer, Public Relations Specialist
May 10, 2019 at 09:59am. Views: 42

A study conducted by researchers in California and the Czech Republic has identified four key hospital workplace factors that influence the smoking behaviors of nurses in Central and Eastern Europe. Access to work breaks was identified as the most prominent of the four influencing factors impacting nurses’ experiences with quitting smoking and staying tobacco-free.

Published in February by Cancer Nursing journal, the study explored nurses’ perceptions of hospital workplace factors that influence their smoking and quitting behaviors. In addition to differences in work breaks by smoking status, other recognized themes include lack of support for quitting, negative effects of nurses’ smoking on patient interactions, and impact of workplace policies on continuing to smoke or deciding to quit.

Anne Berit Petersen, PhD, MS, MPH, assistant professor for the Loma Linda University School of Nursing and the study’s lead author, said changes in healthcare systems and policies are needed to support nurses’ quit efforts and wellbeing. “We need to provide additional education to ensure that nurses, administrators and policymakers understand key issues related to smoking and interactions with patients,” she said. “Supporting nurses’ efforts to quit is critical to strengthening the profession’s impact on prevention of tobacco-induced diseases.”

Titled “‘Everyone Needs a Breath of Fresh Air’: Workplace Impact on Nurses’ Smoking Behaviors,” the study was a joint project of several researchers from the University of California, San Francisco — Petersen’s alma mater — the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Eastern Europe Nurses' Centre of Excellence for Tobacco Control.

“There was a consensus among current and former smokers that nurses’ smoking behaviors are linked to the routines and culture of the workplace, with the most prominent matter being the relationship between work breaks and smoking,” Petersen said.

The study was conducted across five Central and Eastern European countries and included nurses who self-reported as a current smoker or former smoker. Between March 2015, and February 2016, 82 nurses participated in nine focus groups, recruited from hospital-based work settings from across the five Central and Eastern European countries.

Work or rest breaks have been associated with many benefits, including improved job satisfaction, less burnout and stress and even decreased patient death rates, Petersen said. “The lack of guaranteed equitable work breaks was perceived as a significant factor impacting nurses’ smoking behaviors,” Petersen said.

The study identified smoking as the only perceived sanctioned reason for taking a break. Nonsmokers were perceived to receive fewer breaks than nurses who smoked — which incidentally, has been substantiated in quantitative studies conducted in the United States, Petersen said.

“In addition to promoting comprehensive smoke-free programs, one of the most supportive actions employers can take to assist nurses to quit is to ensure that all nurses have equitable access to work breaks.” 

Related Articles

Photo Courtesy of:

By ,

September 26, 2024 at 08:24am. Views: 536

William "Bill" R. Layne.

Photo Courtesy of: City of Grand Terrace

By Stella Pierce, Contributing Writer

April 18, 2024 at 11:20am. Views: 620

Discovering the Charm and Vibrancy of Grand Terrace!

Photo Courtesy of: Inland Empire Community Foundation

By Inland Empire Community Foundation, Community Writer

February 6, 2024 at 07:34pm. Views: 437

Photo Courtesy of: Photo by CHUTTERS

By Haseem Ashraf, Freelance Writer

January 24, 2024 at 04:15pm. Views: 386

Rooftop Gardening

Photo Courtesy of: Alpha Stock Images

By Vivian Johnson, Community Writer

April 5, 2023 at 06:10pm. Views: 453

The City of Grand Terrace has internship opportunities for high school seniors.

Photo Courtesy of: Pixabay

By Vivian Johnson, Community Writer

April 5, 2023 at 06:10pm. Views: 586

Bible scripture shows no indication of an Easter Bunny.

Photo Courtesy of: Kaiser Permanente

By Terry Kanakri, Kaiser Permanente

April 5, 2023 at 04:41pm. Views: 433

The prevalence of hypertension among the Black community can be traced to historical, cultural, medical and lifestyle factors.

Photo Courtesy of: Loma Linda University Health

By Lisa Aubry, Loma Linda University

April 5, 2023 at 04:41pm. Views: 535

Linda Olsen and her husband, Dave, were adventurers even after the accident that took both her legs and right arm.

Photo Courtesy of: Southern California Edison

By Paul Netter, Edison Writer

April 5, 2023 at 04:38pm. Views: 691

Digalert.org or 811 can arrange for free markings by experts who can determine the location of underground lines.

Photo Courtesy of: City of Moreno Valley

By Kay Towine, Community Writer

April 5, 2023 at 04:38pm. Views: 541

The City of Moreno Valley shares the accomplishments so far for 2023.

Photo Courtesy of: San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools

By Luke Page, Community Writer

April 5, 2023 at 04:38pm. Views: 540

Spelling Bee first place champion, Phoebe Laguna, a fifth grader from Granite Mountain Charter School, listens as her word is called and prepares to spell it.

Photo Courtesy of: City of San Bernardino

By Stan Wright, Community Writer

April 5, 2023 at 04:38pm. Views: 392

San Bernardino's Festival: Where Our Cultures Connect event awards the city its 2023 City Cultural Diversity Award, given by the National League of Cities (NLC).

--> -->