| Literature DB >> 22739225 |
Ricardo F Muñoz1, Adrian Aguilera, Stephen M Schueller, Yan Leykin, Eliseo J Pérez-Stable.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Internet interventions have the potential to address many of the health problems that produce the greatest global burden of disease. We present a study illustrating this potential. The Spanish/English San Francisco Stop Smoking Internet site, which yielded quit rates of 20% or more at 12 months in published randomized controlled trials (RCTs), was modified to make it accessible to Spanish- and English-speaking smokers 18 years of age or older anywhere in the world.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22739225 PMCID: PMC3414852 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.1852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Progression of participants through the San Francisco Stop Smoking participant preference site, with follow-up at 1 month (1m), 3 months (3m), 6 months (6m), and 12 months (12m).
Demographics of consenting participants who completed baseline assessment.
| Characteristic | Smokers | Nonsmokers | |||
| All | English-speaking | Spanish-speaking | All | ||
|
| n = 7314 | n = 1688 | n = 5626 | n = 410 | |
| Men | 4024 (55.02%) | 1099 (65.11%) | 2925 (51.99%) | 208 (50.7%) | |
| Women | 3290 (44.98%) | 589 (34.9%) | 2701 (48.01%) | 202 (49.3%) | |
|
| n = 7286 | n = 1658 | n = 5628 | n = 406 | |
| Hispanic/Latino | 5538 (76.01%) | 185 (11.2%) | 5232 (92.96) | 273 (67.2%) | |
| Not Hispanic/Latino | 1752(23.99%) | 1356 (81.79%) | 396 (7.04%) | 133 (32.8%) | |
|
| n = 7097 | n = 1478 | n = 5619 | n = 407 | |
| European descent | 4435 (62.49%) | 617 (41.7%) | 3818 (67.95%) | 280 (70.3%) | |
| Asian descent | 531 (7.5%) | 520 (35.2%) | 11 (0.2%) | 19 (5%) | |
| African descent | 48 (1%) | 42 (3%) | 6 (0.1%) | 2 (1%) | |
| Indigenous descent | 20 (0.3%) | 3 (0.2%) | 17 (0.3%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Other/multiethnic | 1292 (18.20%) | 253 (17.1%) | 1019 (18.13%) | 76 (18.6%) | |
| Mestizo | 771 (10.9%) | 23 (2%) | 748 (13.3%) | 23 (5.7%) | |
|
| n = 7216 | n = 1664 | n = 5552 | n = 406 | |
| High school or less | 1688 (23.39%) | 296 (17.8%) | 1392 (25.07%) | 62 (15%) | |
| Some college | 2626 (36.39%) | 428 (25.7%) | 2198 (39.59%) | 129 (31.8%) | |
| College graduate | 2126 (29.46%) | 622 (37.4%) | 1504 (27.09%) | 139 (34.2%) | |
| Graduate degree | 776 (10.75%) | 318 (19.1%) | 458 (8.2%) | 76 (18%) | |
|
| n = 7345 | n = 1690 | n = 5655 | n = 410 | |
| Single | 2647 (36.04%) | 722 (42.7%) | 1925 (34.04%) | 114 (28.0%) | |
| Cohabiting | 1224 (16.66%) | 195 (11.5%) | 1029 (18.20%) | 83 (20.2%) | |
| Married | 2674 (36.41%) | 626 (37.0%) | 2046 (36.18%) | 167 (40.7%) | |
| Separated | 354 (4.8%) | 55 (3%) | 299 (5.3%) | 16 (4%) | |
| Divorced | 395 (5.4%) | 82 (5%) | 313 (5.5%) | 25 (6%) | |
| Widowed | 53 (1%) | 10 (1%) | 43 (1%) | 4 (1%) | |
a Difference between English- and Spanish-speaking participants is significant at P < .001 level.
b Difference between smokers and nonsmokers is significant at P < .001 level.
c Difference between smokers and nonsmokers is significant at P = .003 level.
d Difference between smokers and nonsmokers is significant at P = .03 level.
Smoking and clinical characteristics of consenting smokers.
| Characteristic | All | English-speaking | Spanish-speaking |
| ||
|
| ||||||
| Age (years) | 35.0 (10.7) | 33.6 (10.7) | 35.8 (10.7) | <.001 | ||
| Age (years), first cigarette | 15.8 (3.3) | 16.6 (4.1) | 15.5 (3.0) | <.001 | ||
| Age(years) regular smoker | 18.8 (4.4) | 19.0 (4.3) | 18.8 (4.4) | .07 | ||
| Cigarettes per day | 18.1 (10.0) | 16.7 (10.0) | 18.5 (10.0) | <.001 | ||
| FTNDa score | 6.5 (2.6) | 7.4 (2.0) | 6.2 (2.7) | <.001 | ||
| Quit confidence | 6.6 (2.3) | 6.7 (2.3) | 6.6 (2.3) | .04 | ||
|
| ||||||
| Nicotine gum | 884 (12.0%) | 235 (13.9%) | 649 (11.5%) | 0.008 | ||
| Nicotine patch | 580 (7.9%) | 220 (13.0%) | 360 (6.4%) | <.001 | ||
| Nicotine inhaler | 60 (1%) | 41 (2%) | 19 (0.3%) | <.001 | ||
| Nicotine spray | 18 (0.2%) | 10 (1%) | 8 (0.1%) | .003 | ||
| Bupropion | 223 (3.0%) | 64 (4%) | 159 (2.8%) | .04 | ||
| Varenicline | 170 (2.3%) | 37 (2%) | 133 (2.3%) | .78 | ||
| Other antidepressant | 103 (1.4%) | 29 (2%) | 74 (1%) | .24 | ||
| Stop smoking group | 124 (1.7%) | 27 (2%) | 97 (2%) | .83 | ||
| Hypnosis | 116 (1.6%) | 56 (3%) | 60 (1%) | <.001 | ||
| Acupuncture | 126 (1.7%) | 29 (2%) | 97 (2%) | 1.00 | ||
| Motivational tapes | 126 (1.7%) | 57 (3%) | 69 (1%) | <.001 | ||
| Other self-help | 321 (4.4%) | 118 (7.0%) | 203 (3.6%) | <.001 | ||
| Other websites | 188 (2.6%) | 51 (3%) | 137 (2.4%) | .19 | ||
| Prayer | 271 (3.7%) | 119 (7.0%) | 152 (2.7%) | <.001 | ||
| Consultation with doctor | 239 (3.3%) | 65 (4%) | 174 (3.1%) | .12 | ||
| Other | 328 (4.5%) | 108 (6.4%) | 220 (3.9%) | <.001 | ||
| None | 5047 (68.64%) | 997 (58.9%) | 4050 (71.55%) | <.001 | ||
|
| ||||||
| Major depressive episodes | ||||||
| No history | 4968 (67.56%) | 1143 (67.51%) | 3825 (67.58%) | .80 | ||
| Past only | 1027 (13.97%) | 283 (16.7%) | 744 (13.1%) | <.001 | ||
| Current | 1358 (18.47%) | 267 (15.8)% | 1091 (19.3%) | .002 | ||
| CES-Db score, mean (SD) | 17.7 (12.2) | 17.9 (11.9) | 17.7 (12.3) | .35 | ||
a Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence.
b Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale.
Self-reported 7-day smoking abstinence, for all smokers and, separately, for smokers eligible for the previous RCTa (% quit).
| All | English-speaking | Spanish-speaking |
| |||
|
| ||||||
| All smokers | ||||||
| Month 1 | 668 (38.1%) | 141 (38.8%) | 527 (37.9%) | .77 | ||
| Month 3 | 546 (44.9%) | 115 (42.9%) | 431 (45.5%) | .49 | ||
| Month 6 | 431 (43.6%) | 100 (47.8%) | 331 (42.5%) | .19 | ||
| Month 12 | 449 (45.4%) | 104 (50.0%) | 345 (44.2%) | .14 | ||
| RCT eligible | ||||||
| Month 1 | 587 (40.4%) | 127 (40.1%) | 460 (40.5%) | .90 | ||
| Month 3 | 466 (45.4%) | 101 (43.0%) | 365 (46.1%) | .42 | ||
| Month 6 | 378 (45.9%) | 87 (49%) | 291 (45.0%) | .35 | ||
| Month 12 | 377 (45.8%) | 93 (51%) | 284 (44.2%) | .11 | ||
|
| ||||||
| All smokers | ||||||
| Month 1 | 668 (9.1%) | 141 (8.3%) | 527 (9.3%) | .23 | ||
| Month 3 | 546 (7.4%) | 115 (6.8%) | 431 (7.6%) | .27 | ||
| Month 6 | 431 (5.9%) | 100 (5.9%) | 331 (5.8%) | .96 | ||
| Month 12 | 449 (6.1%) | 104 (6.1%) | 345 (6.1%) | .96 | ||
| RCT eligible | ||||||
| Month 1 | 587 (9.8%) | 127 (8.8%) | 460 (10.1%) | .17 | ||
| Month 3 | 466 (7.8%) | 101 (7.0%) | 365 (8.0%) | .24 | ||
| Month 6 | 378 (6.3%) | 87 (6%) | 291 (6.4%) | .71 | ||
| Month 12 | 377 (6.3%) | 93 (7%) | 284 (6.2%) | .76 | ||
a Smokers who met eligibility criteria set for the 2009 randomized controlled trial (RCT) [7,11].
b Assuming that every participant not reporting data is still smoking.
Figure 2Observed quit rates by study for the San Francisco Stop Smoking participant preference study and previous randomized controlled trials (RCTs). The outcomes of the current participant preference site, as compared with the RCT with live cohort maintenance follow-up methods ([7], N = 1000), a fully automated RCT without live follow-up ([11], N = 16,430), and condition 4, the condition in that same automated RCT that included all site elements, which approximates the current site, but without the participant preference component ([11], n = 4105). Shaded areas indicate missing data. Observed Quit is defined as the number reporting not smoking divided by number reporting smoking status (smoking or not smoking). Thus, it does not impute values for missing data.