| Literature DB >> 26542471 |
Edwin D Boudreaux1, Beau Abar2, Brianna Haskins3, Brigitte Bauman4, Grant Grissom5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Computer technologies hold promise for implementing tobacco screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT). This study aims to evaluate a computerized tobacco SBIRT system called the Health Evaluation and Referral Assistant (HERA).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26542471 PMCID: PMC4672559 DOI: 10.1186/s13722-015-0045-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract ISSN: 1940-0632
Site characteristics
| Type | Annual volume | Location | Race/ethnicity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Academic, urban | 90,733 | Worcester, MA | W 82 %, H 11 %, B 4 % |
| Community, urban | 47,364 | Worcester, MA | W 74 %, H 14 %, B 9 % |
| Community, suburban | 23,217 | Marlboro, MA | W 80 %, H 15 %, B 3 %, U 2 % |
| Academic, urban | 59,482 | Camden, NJ | W 35 %, H 20 %, B 45 % |
W white, non-Hispanic, H Hispanic, B black, U unknown, MA Massachusetts, NJ New Jersey
Fig. 1Enrollment flow for the HERA RCT—tobacco
Demographic characteristics of the analyzed sample
| Frequency | % | Mean | Standard deviation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participant sex | ||||
| Male | 150 | 35.6 % | ||
| Female | 271 | 64.4 % | ||
| Participant age | 39.0 | 12.2 | ||
| Data collection site | ||||
| Cooper University Hospital (NJ) | 233 | 55.3 % | ||
| UMass University Hospital (MA) | 178 | 42.3 % | ||
| UMass Memorial Hospital (MA) | 4 | 1.0 % | ||
| Marlborough Hospital (MA) | 6 | 1.4 % | ||
| Race | ||||
| White | 291 | 69.1 % | ||
| Black | 114 | 27.1 % | ||
| Other/undocumented | 16 | 3.8 % | ||
| Ethnicity | ||||
| Non-hispanic/Latino | 339 | 80.5 % | ||
| Hispanic/Latino | 67 | 15.9 % | ||
| Not documented | 15 | 3.6 % | ||
| Insurance statusa | ||||
| Private insurance | 80 | 19.0 % | ||
| Medicaid | 127 | 30.2 % | ||
| State financed insurance—non-medicaid | 78 | 18.5 % | ||
| Medicare | 69 | 16.4 % | ||
| Other kind of insurance not listed | 27 | 6.4 % | ||
| No insurance | 73 | 17.3 % | ||
| PHQ-2 | 1.7 | 1.7 | ||
| Any mental health diagnosis | 240 | 57.0 % | ||
| Anxiety/panic attacks/PTSD | 158 | 37.5 % | ||
| Depression/bipolar disorder | 150 | 35.6 % | ||
| Schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder | 12 | 2.9 % | ||
| Anorexia/bulimia | 4 | 1.0 % | ||
| ADD/ADHD | 29 | 6.9 % | ||
| Other mental health diagnosis | 17 | 4.0 % | ||
| Baseline HSI score | 2.5 | 1.4 | ||
| Pack years | 18.2 | 14.9 | ||
| Other tobacco used in past 30 days | ||||
| Cigars | 14 | 3.3 % | ||
| Smokeless tobacco (Dip, Snuff, Chew) | 2 | 0.5 % | ||
| Experimental condition | ||||
| Intervention | 210 | 49.9 % | ||
| Control | 211 | 50.1 % | ||
| Referralb | ||||
| Tailored, printed list of providers (only) | 138 | 65.7 % | ||
| Dynamic referral accepted | 72 | 34.3 % | ||
Risky alcohol and illicit drug users were excluded from the tobacco sample; they were enrolled and randomized into the alcohol and drug use samples, to be reported separately
aInsurance status categories are not mutually exclusive (i.e. participants can have multiple types of insurance)
bOnly participants in the intervention condition. All patients in the intervention group received the tailored, printed list of providers by default. Dynamic referral consists of a faxed referral with a brief tobacco use summary to a tobacco treatment provider matched to the individual based on location of residence and preference for telephone vs. in-person treatment. All patients in the intervention group received the tailored, printed list of providers by default
Comparisons between intervention and control conditions
| Intervention | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| ED clinician (MD/RN) counselinga | ||
| MD/RN asked about tobacco use | 172 (81.9 %) | 165 (78.2 %) |
| MD/RN counseled participant to quit | 73 (34.8 %) | 68 (32.2 %) |
| Received educational materials | 8 (3.8 %) | 14 (6.6 %) |
| Received a smoking cessation referral | 5 (2.4 %) | 11 (5.2 %) |
| Outpatient smoking cessation treatment | ||
| Contact with tobacco treatment provider | ||
| Contact at 1 month | 35 (16.7 %) | 16 (7.6 %) |
| Contact at 3 months | 48 (22.9 %) | 27 (12.8 %) |
| Initiated treatment (evaluated by tobacco treatment provider) | ||
| Treatment initiation at 1 month | 10 (4.8 %) | 8 (3.8 %) |
| Treatment initiation at 3 months | 21 (10.0 %) | 14 (6.6 %) |
| Treatment engagement at either time | 8 (3.8 %) | 7 (3.3 %) |
| Treatment completion | 7 (3.3 %) | 6 (2.8 %) |
| Smoking behavior | ||
| Used tobacco (since ED visit) | ||
| Abstinent for first month (since visit) | 13 (6.2 %) | 19 (9.0 %) |
| Abstinent for 3 months (since visit) | 8 (3.8 %) | 9 (4.3 %) |
| At least one quit attempt at 1 month | 68 (32.4 %) | 72 (34.1 %) |
| At least one quit attempt at 3 months | 105 (50.0 %) | 118 (55.9 %) |
| Attempted to reduce use at 1 month | 125 (59.5 %) | 122 (57.8 %) |
| Attempted to reduce use at 3 months | 150 (71.4 %) | 154 (73.0 %) |
All percentages and analyses use the ITT principal of worst outcome for missing values
aED clinician behavior assessment included behaviors over and above the materials provided as part of the research study. All patients in both groups had tobacco assessed as part of the study and received a referral list. The control group received a pre-printed list, while the intervention group received a personally tailored list, as well as a dynamic referral if desired
Comparisons across intervention, tailored list only; intervention, dynamic referral; and control conditions
| Intervention-provider list | Intervention-dynamic referral | Control | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outpatient smoking cessation treatment | |||
| Contact with tobacco treatment provider | |||
| Contact at 1 month | 3 (2.0 %) | 32 (44.4 %) | 16 (7.6 %) |
| Contact at 3 months | 6 (4.3 %) | 42 (58.3 %) | 27 (12.8 %) |
| Initiated treatment (evaluated by tobacco treatment provider) | |||
| Treatment initiation at 1 month | 2 (1.4 %) | 8 (11.1 %) | 8 (3.8 %) |
| Treatment initiation at 3 months | 3 (2.2 %) | 18 (25.0 %) | 14 (6.6 %) |
| Treatment engagement, either time | 2 (1.4 %) | 6 (8.3 %) | 7 (3.3 %) |
| Treatment completion | 2 (1.4 %) | 5 (6.9 %) | 6 (2.8 %) |
| Tobacco cessation | |||
| Abstinent for first month (since visit) | 10 (7.2 %) | 3 (4.2 %) | 19 (9.0 %) |
| Abstinent for 3 months (since visit) | 6 (4.3 %) | 2 (2.8 %) | 9 (4.3 %) |
| At least one quit attempt at 1 month | 47 (34.1 %) | 21 (29.2 %) | 72 (34.1 %) |
| At least one quit attempt at 3 months | 72 (52.2 %) | 33 (45.8 %) | 118 (55.9 %) |
| Attempted to reduce use at 1 month | 80 (58.0 %) | 45 (62.5 %) | 122 (57.8 %) |
| Attempted to reduce use at 3 months | 98 (71.0 %) | 52 (72.2 %) | 154 (73.0 %) |
Follow-up GEE results with covariates
| Predictor | Odds ratio (95 % CI) |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment contact | Heavy Smoking Index | 1.13 (0.90–1.140) | 0.29 |
| Readiness to quit | 1.21 (0.84–1.75) | 0.30 | |
| Intervention (list) vs. control | 0.61 (0.27–1.41) | 0.25 | |
| Intervention (DR) vs. control | 10.96 (6.12–19.61) | <0.001 | |
| Treatment initiation | Heavy Smoking Index | 1.16 (0.85–1.59) | 0.34 |
| Readiness to quit | 1.60 (0.87–2.94) | 0.13 | |
| Intervention (list) vs. control | 0.61 (0.20–1.85) | 0.38 | |
| Intervention (DR) vs. control | 3.74 (1.79–7.81) | <0.001 | |
| Abstinence | Heavy Smoking Index | 0.90 (0.74–1.08) | 0.26 |
| Readiness to quit | 1.10 (0.83–1.45) | 0.51 | |
| Intervention (list) vs. control | 1.06 (0.61–1.86) | 0.82 | |
| Intervention (DR) vs. control | 0.82 (0.36–1.85) | 0.62 |
DR dynamic referral