Abstract

This study explored how Covid-19 lockdown restrictions affected people’s daily smoking routines and behaviours, including adherence and modifications to pre-established smoking restrictions in the home. Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with smokers and non-smokers from smoking households 19 to 27 weeks after the first full UK lockdown ended in May 2020. A non-probability purposive sample representing 25 adults aged 21 or over living in households with at least 1 smoker were recruited to the study. A quota sampling strategy was used, according to age, gender, smoking status, family status, household composition, householder access to outdoor space, and change to work-life status. Most participants found lockdown increased the amount of time spent at home, where stresses associated with confinement, curtailment of social routines, removal of barriers and distractions to smoking due to home working, and feelings of boredom all contributed to increased smoking. Fewer factors were identified as reducing smoking during lockdown. Prominent examples included disruption to habitual smoking patterns and distraction from smoking associated with spending more time doing outdoor activities. Pressures placed on physical space and lack of privacy due to the confinement at home were responsible for displacement of smoking within the home, leading to breaking of smoke-free rules and family tensions, and in some cases to greater awareness amongst parents that their children smoked. Changes in daily routines associated with lockdown affected and displaced smoking behaviour both positively and negatively. Health improvement interventions could seek to harness positive changes in smoking associated with any future lockdown approaches. New home-working norms highlight the need for employers to support staff to reduce their smoking and to remain smoke-free.

Highlights

  • Introduction published maps and institutional affilMany governments worldwide responded to the Covid-19 pandemic by introducing lockdowns restricting social contact to limit the transmission of the disease and reduce the risk of health services being overwhelmed

  • Sixteen participants lived in homes with smoke-free rules, and nine lived in homes where smoking was permitted

  • This study provided novel insights regarding the impacts of changed routines associated with lockdown restrictions on household smoking behaviours

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Summary

Introduction

Many governments worldwide responded to the Covid-19 pandemic by introducing lockdowns restricting social contact to limit the transmission of the disease and reduce the risk of health services being overwhelmed. Lockdowns were accompanied by Government communications, encouraging the public to stay at home except for essential purposes. From the early stages of the pandemic, evidence suggested that smoking is associated with increased severity of disease and death in hospitalised Covid-19 patients [2,3]. Evidence in the UK and elsewhere suggests that Covid-19 and associated lockdown measures have impacted on smoking behaviours in varied ways. Some smokers report increased daily tobacco use, suggesting that smoking has been used as a coping mechanism iations

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