| Literature DB >> 30058417 |
Shelby C Lautner1, Whitney R Garney1, Idethia S Harney1.
Abstract
The prevalence of adult smokers within the state of Texas population is 19.2% with 25% of those smokers being African American. Although the smoking rate of African Americans in Texas is very high, they only represent about 18% of the calls to the Texas Tobacco Quitline. To investigate this phenomenon, researchers from Texas A&M University completed a qualitative study to investigate the social norms and awareness of the Quitline among African American males. Focus groups were conducted in a rural community to determine perceptions and attitudes towards smoking among the African American population, as this was an exploratory study. The focus group participants were 71% smokers and 90% identified as African American. Data collected during the focus groups revealed information three major themes which were derived from the research question. These themes were social norms of smoking, smoking cessation, and services needed for smoking cessation. Information learned was insightful because little information exists about successful smoking cessation strategies specifically for African American male subpopulations. With this information, data can be further synthesized and outreach strategies can be further developed to help decrease the gap in health equity as it related to African American males and smoking and increase calls to the Quitline.Entities:
Keywords: access to care; behavioral issues; community outreach; health-care issues; health-care utilization; psychosocial and cultural issues; social determinants of health; tobacco use
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30058417 PMCID: PMC6199448 DOI: 10.1177/1557988318790895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Mens Health ISSN: 1557-9883
COREQ Reporting Guidelines.
| DOMAIN 1: RESEARCH TEAM AND REFLEXIVITY | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Interviewer/facilitator: | Shelby Launter1
|
| Occupation: | Graduate Research Assistant at Texas A&M University1, Assistant Professor at Texas A&M Univeristy2, |
| Gender: | All female |
| Experience and training: | Research team training in qualitative data analysis and data collection1, Doctoral level training and previous qualitative experience2,3 |
|
| |
| Relationship established: | No |
| Participant knowledge of the interviewer: | The participants knew what institution the researchers were from and their job title. |
| Interviewer characteristics: | Institution affiliation, job title, and purpose of study |
|
| |
|
| |
| Methodological orientation and theory: | Qualitative approach in a constructivist paradigm |
|
| |
| Sampling: | Convenience sample recruited by a community champion |
| Method of approach: | Community champion recruited participants from a local Community Health Resource Center and by phone |
| Sample size: | 21 |
| Nonparticipation: | 0 |
|
| |
| Setting of data collection: | The data collection occurred in a rural East, Central Texas county and meetings were conducted at a local senior center. |
| Presence of nonparticipants: | Senior center staff |
| Description of sample: | 71% ( |
|
| |
|
| |
| Interview guide: | An interview guide with open-ended questions was developed based on |
| Repeat interviews: | No |
| Audio/visual recording: | Audio recording was used for one focus group, but not the second because one participant did not want to be recorded. |
| Field notes: | Field notes were taken electronically and via flipchart during the focus groups. These were the primary source of data for the focus group that was not audio recorded. |
| Duration: | 30–45 min per focus group |
| Data saturation: | Data saturation was not discussed with focus group participants, but was identified during analysis |
| Transcripts returned: | No, transcripts were de-identified and used for the purpose of the analysis |
|
| |
|
| |
| Number of data coders: | 4 trained members of the research team |
| Description of the coding tree: | Yes—A coding tree was used which divided the data into three categories that aligned with the research question. The three categories were smoking perceptions/norms, facilitators to quitting, and services needed for quitting. |
| Derivation of themes: | Themes were derived from the data by identifying patterns coherent with the research question and dividing those patterns into categories ( |
| Software: | As units of data were extracted from the transcripts/field notes, they were entered into excel, sorted into categories, then organized into themes. |
| Participant checking: | No |
|
| |
| Quotations presented: | Yes, quotes are included in the manuscript based on key findings. |
| Data and findings consistent: | Yes, data saturation was met during data analysis. |
| Clarity of major themes: | Yes, themes were organized based on major categories derived from the data that were salient with the research question. |
| Clarity of minor themes: | Yes—minor themes were incorporated into the discussion about major themes. |
Participant Demographics (N = 21).
| Characteristic | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Race/Ethnicity | |
| Black or African American | 90% |
| Two or more races | 10% |
| Sex[ | |
| Male | 90% |
| Education level | |
| Less than high school | 9% |
| High school | 57% |
| Vocational school | 4% |
| Some college | 9% |
| 2-year degree | 14% |
| Bachelors or above | 4% |
| Income level (yearly, 2017 U.S. dollar) | |
| Under $5,000 | 33% |
| $5,000–$9,999 | 28% |
| 10,000–$14,999 | 9% |
| $20,000–$24,999 | 9% |
| $25,000 and above | 17% |
| Marital status | |
| Single, never married | 9% |
| Married | 57% |
| Separated or widowed | 13% |
| Divorced | 14% |
Note. aFemale participation accounted for 10% of participation, but was not included due to the focus on African American male smoking habits.