| Literature DB >> 21655136 |
Jessie E Saul1, Rebecca Lien, Barbara Schillo, Annette Kavanaugh, Ann Wendling, Michael Luxenberg, Lija Greenseid, Lawrence C An.
Abstract
Many tobacco cessation quitlines provide nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) in the U.S. but consensus is lacking regarding the best shipping protocol or NRT amounts. We evaluated the impact of the Minnesota QUITPLAN(®) Helpline's shift from distributing NRT using a single eight-week shipment to a two-shipment protocol. For this observational study, the eight week single-shipment cohort (n = 247) received eight weeks of NRT (patches or gum) at once, while the split-shipment cohort (n = 160) received five weeks of NRT (n = 94), followed by an additional three weeks of NRT if callers continued with counseling (n = 66). Patient satisfaction, retention, quit rates, and cost associated with the three groups were compared. A higher proportion of those receiving eight weeks of NRT, whether in one or two shipments, reported that the helpline was "very helpful" (77.2% of the single-shipment group; 81.1% of the two-shipment group) than those receiving five weeks of NRT (57.8% of the one-shipment group) (p = 0.004). Callers in the eight week two-shipment group completed significantly more calls (3.0) than callers in the five week one-shipment group (2.4) or eight week single-shipment group (1.7) (p < 0.001). Using both responder and intent-to-treat calculations, there were no significant differences in 30-day point prevalence abstinence at seven months among the three protocol groups even when controlling for demographic and tobacco use characteristics, and treatment group protocol. The mean cost per caller was greater for the single-shipment phase than the split-shipment phase ($350 vs. $326) due to the savings associated with not sending a second shipment to some participants. Assuming no difference in abstinence rates resulting from the protocol change, cost-per-quit was lowest for the five week one-shipment group ($1,155), and lower for the combined split-shipment cohort ($1,242) than for the single-shipment cohort ($1,350). Results of this evaluation indicate that while satisfaction rates increase among those receiving more counseling and NRT, quit rates do not, even when controlling for demographic and tobacco use characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: NRT; cessation medications; cost effectiveness; nicotine replacement therapy; program evaluation; tobacco cessation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21655136 PMCID: PMC3108126 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph8051547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Inclusion and Exclusion criteria by NRT protocol group.
| Total calls | 353 | 301 | ||
| Calling for self | 10 | 343 | 2 | 299 |
| Served by the helpline | 14 | 329 | 0 | 299 |
| Consented to inclusion data in public reporting | 3 | 326 | 5 | 294 |
| Still smoking at registration | 13 | 313 | 88 | 206 |
| Dosed for NRT | 66 | 247 | 46 | 160 |
| Total included in study | 247 | 160 (94 received 5 weeks of NRT; 66 received 5 + 3 weeks of NRT) | ||
NRT = Nicotine Replacement Therapy.
Baseline characteristics of callers by NRT protocol group.
| N | % | N | % | N | % | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Responder to 6 month survey | 184 | 74.5% | 64 | 68.1% | 53 | 80.3% | 0.21 |
| Gender—female | 134 | 54.7% | 50 | 53.2% | 39 | 60.0% | 0.68 |
| 18–24 | |||||||
| 25+ | |||||||
| Married | 46 (of 92) | 50.0% | 26 | 38.2% | 28 | 50.9% | 0.25 |
| Employed | 60 (of 92) | 65.2% | 45 | 66.2% | 32 | 58.2% | 0.61 |
| Ethnicity/race (non-White) | 39 (of 244) | 16.0% | 10 (of 92) | 10.9% | 8 (of 63) | 12.7% | 0.45 |
| Education | N = 239 | N = 92 | N = 64 | 0.59 | |||
| High school or less | 107 | 44.8% | 48 | 52.2% | 26 | 40.6% | |
| Some college | 90 | 37.7% | 28 | 30.4% | 27 | 42.2% | |
| College grad/post-grad | 42 | 17.6% | 16 | 17.4% | 11 | 17.2% | |
| Readiness to quit (ready to quit in the next 30 days) | 239 | 96.8% | 86 | 91.5% | 63 | 95.5% | 0.12 |
| Light-Mod. (<25 cigs/day) | 203 | 82.2% | 63 | 67.0% | 50 | 75.8% | |
| Heavy (25+ cigs/day) | 44 | 17.8% | 31 | 33.0% | 16 | 24.2% | |
| Time to first cigarette | N = 245 | N = 84 | N = 60 | 0.06 | |||
| <30 min | 182 | 74.3% | 71 | 84.5% | 51 | 85.0% | |
| 31 or more min | 63 | 25.7% | 13 | 15.5% | 9 | 15.0% | |
| Quit attempts prior year | N = 247 | N = 93 | N = 66 | 0.36 | |||
| 0 | 14 | 5.7% | 7 | 7.5% | 7 | 10.6% | |
| 1 or more | 233 | 94.3% | 86 | 92.5% | 59 | 89.4% | |
All p values calculated by chi-square test; Mod = Moderate; NRT = Nicotine Replacement Therapy; Bold text indicates statistically significant findings (p < 0.05).
Cost per quit using ITT 30-day abstinence rates.
| 247 | 100% | $350 | $86,450 | 28.3% | 38.0% | ||||
| Five-weeks One-shipment | 94 | 58.8% | $295 | $27,730 | 18.1% | $1,631 | 26.6% | $1,109 | |
| Five-plus-three weeks Two-shipments | 66 | 41.3% | $370 | $24,420 | 28.8% | $1,285 | 35.8% | $911 | |
| 160 | 100% | $326 | $52,150 | 22.5% | 30.8% |
Weighted average cost per quit calculated by multiplying the average cost per quit by the % of sample, and adding those results together; PPA = point prevalence abstinence; ITT = intent-to-treat; RR = responder rate.