| Literature DB >> 28725452 |
Robert S Schick1,2, Thomas W Kelsey3, John Marston4, Kay Samson5, Gerald W Humphris6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Approximately 11,000 people die in Scotland each year as a result of smoking-related causes. Quitting smoking is relatively easy; maintaining a quit attempt is a very difficult task with success rates for unaided quit attempts stubbornly remaining in the single digits. Pharmaceutical treatment can improve these rates by lowering the overall reward factor of nicotine. However, these and related nicotine replacement therapies do not operate on, or address, the spatial and contextual aspects of smoking behaviour. With the ubiquity of smartphones that can log spatial, quantitative and qualitative data related to smoking behaviour, there exists a person-centred clinical opportunity to support smokers attempting to quit by first understanding their smoking behaviour and subsequently sending them dynamic messages to encourage health behaviour change within a situational context.Entities:
Keywords: App; Geospatial; Hidden Markov models; INLA; Smartphone; Smoking cessation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28725452 PMCID: PMC5513177 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-017-0165-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1Schematic of patient progress through the MapMySmoke study
Fig. 2Screenshots from the MapMySmoke app indicating one data entry screen and two visual summaries
Data collected during the first feasibility trial. Of eight consented patients, four regularly logged. Scores shown are the mean for each of five questions that accompany each smoking event (0–10 scale with 10 being higher, e.g. higher stress ahead of the cigarette and higher craving level)
| User | No. of cigarettes | Mean stress score | Mean craving score | Mean taste score | Mean satisfaction score | Mean craving reduction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| User 1 | 14 | 0.75 | 5.46 | 5.57 | 5.96 | 5.25 |
| User 2 | 90 | 5 | 4.94 | 5.08 | 5.05 | 5.11 |
| User 3 | 62 | 3.775 | 6.59 | 3.89 | 6.29 | 4.68 |
| User 4 | 4 | 4.75 | 6.25 | 5 | 7.37 | 5.25 |
Fig. 3Map showing smoking locations as logged by two users in the first feasibility study. The colours indicate the smoker but have been randomised to preserve anonymity. Size of the circle corresponds to the degree of satisfaction the patient expressed for each smoking event
Patient anecdotes reported to GP (J Marston) following initial logging phase. These were in response to specific questions about patient motivation, experience with the app and suggestions for improvement
| Patient | Why did you take part in the study? | What did you like about the app? | What would you change about the app? | Do you think the app would help smokers to quit or maintain quitting? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient A | Wanted help to quit—failed quit attempts in past | Liked the app as it is. Did not find it difficult to use. Most useful feature was that when a craving was felt, the process of logging diverted her attention and often the craving would subside. | Nothing | Yes. Concerned that when NRT was finished cravings might become a problem. Would definitely consider logging again to maintain quit. |
| Patient B | Sounded interesting. Multiple failed attempts—allergic to Nicotine patches and ‘did not want to put more chemicals in my body’ | Liked the current features and look of the app. Particularly liked that ‘logging’ made you stop and think about having a cigarette rather than smoking being an automatic habit. Logging often delayed having a cigarette | Missed not being able to review previous comments. Thought it would be nice to anonymously look at what other people were saying. Felt that you could gain a lot of support from other quitters. Could there be some sort of anonymised chat room? Could this be part of the app? | Yes—useful for both quitting and maintaining quit. Would like to help with Phase 2. |
| Patient C | Mixture of wanting to quit and to help medical developments | Quite easy to use—particularly liked watching improvements in life expectancy as he reduced smoking. | Would like to have had more depth to the app—was not able to specify, but thought it was over simplistic. | Yes, but need to be motivated. ‘You get out what you put in’ |
Fig. 4Data flow for the MapMySmoke app