Literature DB >> 23621745

Increasing tobacco quitline calls from pregnant african american women: the "one tiny reason to quit" social marketing campaign.

May G Kennedy1, Maureen Wilson Genderson, Allison L Sepulveda, Sheryl L Garland, Diane Baer Wilson, Rose Stith-Singleton, Susan Dubuque.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Pregnant African American women are at disproportionately high risk of premature birth and infant mortality, outcomes associated with cigarette smoking. Telephone-based, individual smoking cessation counseling has been shown to result in successful quit attempts in the general population and among pregnant women, but "quitlines" are underutilized. A social marketing campaign called One Tiny Reason to Quit (OTRTQ) promoted calling a quitline (1-800-QUIT-NOW) to pregnant, African American women in Richmond, Virginia, in 2009 and was replicated there 2 years later.
METHODS: The campaign disseminated messages via radio, interior bus ads, posters, newspaper ads, and billboards. Trained volunteers also delivered messages face-to-face and distributed branded give-away reminder items. The number of calls made from pregnant women in the Richmond area during summer 2009 was contrasted with (a) the number of calls during the seasons immediately before and after the campaign, and (b) the number of calls the previous summer. The replication used the same evaluation design.
RESULTS: There were statistically significant spikes in calls from pregnant women during both campaign waves for both types of contrasts. A higher proportion of the calls from pregnant women were from African Americans during the campaign.
CONCLUSION: A multimodal quitline promotion like OTRTQ should be considered for geographic areas with sizable African American populations and high rates of infant mortality.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23621745      PMCID: PMC3653397          DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2012.3845

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Womens Health (Larchmt)        ISSN: 1540-9996            Impact factor:   2.681


  17 in total

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4.  Quitline utilization rates of African-American and white smokers: the California experience.

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2.  The African American Women and Mass Media (AAMM) campaign in Georgia: quantifying community response to a CDC pilot campaign.

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7.  Evaluation of a federally funded mass media campaign and smoking cessation in pregnant women: a population-based study in three states.

Authors:  Lucinda England; Van T Tong; Karilynn Rockhill; Jason Hsia; Tim McAfee; Deesha Patel; Katelin Rupp; Elizabeth J Conrey; Claudia Valdivieso; Kevin C Davis
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Review 8.  Pro-tobacco marketing and anti-tobacco campaigns aimed at vulnerable populations: A review of the literature.

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  8 in total

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