Abstract
Although anxiety symptoms/disorders are consistently implicated in smoking processes, no empirical work has identified individual difference factors that may underlie such relations among Latinx smokers. The current study examined anxiety sensitivity as an explanatory factor underlying the relationship between anxiety symptoms and smoking expectancies among Spanish-speaking Latinx smokers. Participants included 363 Spanish-speaking Latinx daily smokers (58.7% female, Mage = 33.3 years, SD = 9.81). Results indicated that anxiety symptoms had a significant indirect effect on positive and negative smoking expectancies through anxiety sensitivity. Such findings suggest that anxiety sensitivity is relevant to understanding the anxiety-smoking expectancies association among Latinx smokers.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
Notes
1 Additional models were examined using the HADS depression subscale as a predictor, anxiety sensitivity as a mediator, and the four outcomes remained the same. All four models displayed significant indirect effects with effect sizes ranging from 0.07 to 0.08.