Trying to stop smoking: Effects of perceived addiction, attributions for failure, and expectancy of success

This paper reports the results of a postal questionnaire completed by 2343 smokers who had contacted a television company for help with stopping smoking. Of these, 1848 (78.9%) completed a follow-up questionnaire 1 year later. This indicated that 797 had tried to stop, 709 had tried to cut down, and 164 had become abstinent. Analyses show that the intention to try to stop smoking was dependent not only on the perceived health benefit, but also on the subjects' confidence that they would succeed if they tried to stop. As predicted by Weiner's [(1979). J. Educ. Psychol.71: 3–25] model of achievement motivation, those who attributed other smokers' failures at quitting to stable factors had lower expectancies of success, as had those who saw themselves as more addicted. When the follow-up data are considered, reported attempts at quitting were strongly related to previously declared intentions, and reported abstinence was related to previous confidence (expectancy of success) and perceived addiction. There is no support for hypotheses concerning self-other differences in attribution, or defensive attribution, in subjects' attributions for their own failures at cessation. Implications for antismoking interventions are discussed.

[1]  M. Russell Cigarette smoking: natural history of a dependence disorder. , 1971, The British journal of medical psychology.

[2]  P. Bentler,et al.  Models of attitude–behavior relations. , 1979 .

[3]  D. Robinson,et al.  The alcohologist's addiction. Some implications of having lost control over the disease concept of alcoholism. , 1972, Quarterly journal of studies on alcohol.

[4]  J. Eiser,et al.  Smokers' and non-smokers' attributions about smoking: a case of actor-observer differences? , 1978, The British journal of social and clinical psychology.

[5]  J. Eiser Discrepancy, dissonance, and the "dissonant" smoker. , 1978, The International journal of the addictions.

[6]  H. Kelley,et al.  Attribution theory and research. , 1980, Annual review of psychology.

[7]  B. Weiner,et al.  A theory of motivation for some classroom experiences. , 1979, Journal of educational psychology.

[8]  Daniel W. Russell,et al.  The cognition–emotion process in achievement-related contexts. , 1979 .

[9]  J. Eiser,et al.  Smokers, non-smokers and the attribution of addiction. , 1977, The British journal of social and clinical psychology.

[10]  Studies of the interaction of psychological and pharmacological determinants of smoking. , 1977, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[11]  J. Eiser,et al.  Smoking as a subjectively rational choice. , 1977, Addictive behaviors.

[12]  S. Schachter Recidivism and self-cure of smoking and obesity. , 1982, The American psychologist.

[13]  O. D. Duncan Path Analysis: Sociological Examples , 1966, American Journal of Sociology.

[14]  A. Bandura Self-efficacy: toward a unifying theory of behavioral change. , 1977, Psychological review.

[15]  M. Jarvis The treatment of cigarette dependence. , 2006, British Journal of Addiction.

[16]  W. A. Hunt,et al.  Three years later: recent developments in the experimental modification of smoking behavior. , 1973, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[17]  J. Eiser,et al.  The effect of fear-arousing communications on cigarette smoking: An expectancy-value approach , 1984, Journal of Behavioral Medicine.

[18]  I. Ajzen,et al.  Understanding Attitudes and Predicting Social Behavior , 1980 .

[19]  Kelly G. Shaver,et al.  Defensive attribution-Effects of severity and relevance on the responsibility assigned for an accident , 1970 .

[20]  James Michaels,et al.  Smoking: a behavioral analysis , 1971 .

[21]  B. Weiner,et al.  An attributional analysis of achievement motivation. , 1970 .

[22]  J. Eiser,et al.  Dependence, relapse and extinction: a theoretical critique and a behavioral examination. , 1979, Journal of clinical psychology.

[23]  E. E. Jones,et al.  The actor and the observer: Divergent perceptions of the causes of behavior. , 1972 .

[24]  J. Eiser,et al.  "Consonant" and "dissonant" smokers and the self-attribution of addiction. , 1978, Addictive behaviors.

[25]  A. McKennell,et al.  Adults' and adolescents' smoking habits and attitudes. A Government Social Survey for the Ministry of Health (Report S.S. 353/B). , 1967 .