RT Journal Article T1 Should tobacco interventions be different in men and women? A1 de-Granda-Orive, J Ignacio A1 Pascual-Lledo, J F A1 Asensio-Sanchez, S A1 Solano-Reina, S A1 Garcia-Rueda, M A1 Martinez-Muñiz, M A A1 Lazaro-Asegurado, L A1 Bujulbasichg, D A1 Pendino, R A1 Luhning, S A1 Cienfuegos-Agustin, I A1 Jimenez-Ruiz, C A K1 Smoking K1 Nicotine K1 Smoking Cessation K1 Tobacco Use AB Men and women differ in their smoking behaviour: women smoke fewer cigarettes per day, their consumption is more related to sensory effects, mood and negative emotions, they start smoking later with a lower cumulative consumption and tend to use cigarettes with lower nicotine content, show lower dependency scores than men, become dependent earlier and have greater difficulty quitting smoking experiencing more severe nicotine withdrawal symtoms.1 We conducted an observational, multicenter study of consecutive patients who attended several smoking clinics to stop smoking between October 2014 and October 2015. We wanted to know if there were differences between men and women in terms of tobacco consumption. PB Elsevier YR 2019 FD 2019-02-25 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/13224 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/13224 LA en NO Ignacio de Granda-Orive J, Pascual-Lledó JF, Asensio-Sánchez S, Solano-Reina S, García-Rueda M, Martínez-Muñiz MÁ, et al. Should tobacco interventions be different in men and women? Pulmonology. 2019 Jan-Feb;25(1):55-58 DS RISalud RD Sep 27, 2025