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. 2019 Jul 10;22(1):48–57. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntz072

Figure 3.

Figure 3.

Stratified by mental disorder: The association of prescribing varenicline compared with NRT and smoking cessation at 2-years follow-up. Fully adjusted odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals from logistic regression models. Fully adjusted models were adjusted for: age, sex, days in history, IMD, number of GP visits 1-year before first prescription, BMI, year of first prescription, history of major physical morbidity (Charlson Index), alcohol misuse ever, drug misuse ever, bipolar ever, depression ever, neurotic disorder ever, self-harm ever, other mental disorder ever, antidepressant prescription ever, antipsychotic prescription ever, hypnotics/anxiolytics prescription ever, other psychoactive medication ever, other behavioral/neurologic disorder ever. Missing BMI and IMD values were imputed using multiple imputation.24 No mental disorder diagnosis or psychoactive medication prescription (N = 156 857); any mental disorder diagnosis or psychoactive medication prescription (N = 78 457); bipolar (N = 2011); depression (N = 17 168); neurotic disorder (N = 8394); schizophrenia (N = 8,394); antidepressants (N = 56 756); antipsychotics (N = 11 829); hypnotics/anxiolytics (N = 31 291); mood stabilizers (N = 4727).