| Literature DB >> 26155841 |
Arnold H Levinson1,2, Patricia Valverde3, Kathleen Garrett4, Michele Kimminau5, Emily K Burns6, Karen Albright7, Debra Flynn8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A majority of continuing smokers in the United States are socioeconomically disadvantaged (SED) adults, who are less likely than others to achieve and maintain abstinence despite comparable quit-attempt rates. A national research initiative seeks effective new strategies for increasing successful smoking cessation outcomes among SED populations. There is evidence that chronic and acute stressors may interfere with SED smokers who try to quit on their own. Patient navigators have been effectively used to improve adherence to chronic disease treatment. We designed and have pilot-tested an innovative, non-clinical community-based intervention--smoking cessation treatment navigators--to determine feasibility (acceptance, adherence, and uncontrolled results) for evaluation by randomized controlled trial (RCT).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26155841 PMCID: PMC5477807 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1962-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics of pilot study participants
| ( | |
|---|---|
| female | 63 % |
| mean age (CI) | 40.1 (32.4, 48.6) |
| ethnicity* | |
| black/African American | 68 % |
| Latino | 18 % |
| Anglo/non-Hispanic white | 10 % |
| American Indian | 5 % |
| more than high school education | 50 % |
| health insurance status | |
| Medicaid | 38 % |
| other (includes indigent care program) | 29 % |
| none or status unknown | 33 % |
| sole adult in household | 43 % |
| married/living as married | 35 % |
| employment status* | |
| wage-worker or self-employed | 38 % |
| disabled | 25 % |
| student | 15 % |
| unemployed | 10 % |
| stay-at-home parent | 5 % |
| retired | 5 % |
| mental diagnosis (self-reported, may report >1 type) | |
| depression | 33 % |
| bipolar | 14 % |
| anxiety | 11 % |
| schizophrenia | 6 % |
CI: 95 % confidence interval
*does not sum to 100 % due to rounding
Smoking and cessation history
| ( | |
|---|---|
| currently smoke daily | 98 % |
| median cigarettes per day | 10 |
| first cigarette ≤30 min of waking | 68 % |
| mean baseline CO (ppm) | 17.5 |
| level indicated abstinence* | 23 % |
| any lifetime quit attempt | 80 % |
| median number of quit attempts | 2 |
| median days (CI) of longest abstinence | 9 (4, 30) |
| ever used NRT (if any quit attempt) | 52 % |
| ever used quitline (if any quit attempt) | 39 % |
| past year quit attempt | 60 % |
| past year provider advice to quit | |
| yes | 60 % |
| no | 15 % |
| did not see provider | 13 % |
| no answer | 13 % |
| how confident can stay quit one month (1-10 scale) | 6.1 |
CO = expired carbon monoxide; NRT = nicotine replacement therapy
*< 10 ppm
Study outcomes
| Cessation behaviors and outcomes | ||
|---|---|---|
| provided follow-up data | 85 % ( | |
| mean time to follow-up (months (CI)) | 5.2 (4.7, 5.7) | ITT* |
| made a quit attempt | 82 % | 70 % |
| initiated treatment | 82 % | 70 % |
| enrolled in quitline (QL) | 50 % | 43 % |
| completed all QL sessions (if enrolled) | 28 % | – |
| used NRT | 71 % | 60 % |
| self-reported abstinence (≥7 days) | 21 % | 18 % |
| CO-confirmed abstinence† | 9 % | – |
| median days (CI) longest abstinence during study (if >0) | 21 (7, 58) | – |
| relapsed, highly motivated to try again (≥9 on 10-point scale) | 70 % | – |
| program utilization and satisfaction | ||
| mean number (CI) of guide sessions completed | 3.4 (2.5, 4.2) | |
| mean duration (CI) of guide sessions (minutes) | 30.0 (27.0, 32.6) | |
| “very likely” to recommend guide program to family, friend | 74 % | 63 % |
| time with guide was “about the right amount” | 68 % | 58 % |
| guide’s advice was “very helpful” | 67 % | 55 % |
| program increase chance of success “a lot” | 59 % | 50 % |
| sessions increased quit-confidence “a lot” | 56 % | 48 % |
| sessions helped with problems in quitting | 44 % | 38 % |
| program was “very helpful” (vs. “somewhat” or “not very”) | 41 % | 35 % |
| “very hard” to fit guide sessions into schedule | 35 % | 45 % |
| guide attributes (1-7 scale) | mean | median |
| responsive | 6.2 | 7 |
| listened | 6.2 | 7 |
| supportive | 6.1 | 7 |
| trusted | 5.9 | 6 |
| collaborative | 5.5 | 6 |
| directive | 5.4 | 6 |
| helpful | 5.3 | 6 |
| important to my quitting | 5.1 | 6 |
| empathetic | 5.1 | 6 |
CI = 95 % confidence interval
*intent-to-treat analysis: no follow-up ≡ failed outcome
† < 10 ppm among participants self-reporting 7-day point abstinence
Illustrated themes from participant interviews about the Smoking Solutions Guide program
| Theme | Participant quotes |
|---|---|
| trust | “I trusted her and could tell her anything.” |
| “I didn’t feel like she went out of this room and talked about me.” | |
| autonomy | “The guide asked me what I wanted to do – she didn’t push.” |
| convenience | “After my meeting (with the guide) I could pick up my kids and go home. It was a good place to come to.” |
| coach | “She helped coach me through the difficult times. When I needed her the most, she was the only one to support me with my quitting. She was not judgmental. She was someone so supportive I could go to her.” |
| education | “We discussed triggers and cravings. I didn’t know anything about that.” |
| confidence | “She was like my cheering section. When I thought I couldn’t do it, she was always there.” |
| instrumental support | “When I didn’t have patches, they gave me patches and also lozenges. Financial-wise it helped, because I couldn’t afford it, and they always had back up for me.” |
| “I didn’t know how to go to my health provider – I didn’t know what to say – so she helped me [figure out] what questions to ask before.” |
Fig. 1How exiting participants (n = 23) rated their guides on prompted attributes and behaviors