Literature DB >> 31165637

Steps Toward Scalability: Illustrations From a Smoke-Free Homes Program.

Michelle C Kegler1, Regine Haardörfer1, Taylor Melanson1, Lindsey Allen2, Lucja T Bundy1, Matthew W Kreuter3, Rebecca S Williams4, Melbourne F Hovell5, Patricia Dolan Mullen6.   

Abstract

Scalable interventions remain effective across a range of real-world settings and can be modified to fit organizational and community context. "Smoke-Free Homes: Some Things are Better Outside" has been effective in promoting smoke-free home rules in low-income households in efficacy, effectiveness, generalizability, and dissemination studies. Using data from a dissemination study in collaboration with five 2-1-1 call centers in Ohio, Florida, Oklahoma, and Alabama (n = 2,345 households), this article examines key dimensions of scalability, including effectiveness by subpopulation, secondary outcomes, identification of core elements driving effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness. Evaluated by 2-1-1 staff using a pre-post design with self-reported outcomes at 2 months postbaseline, the program was equally effective for men and women, across education levels, with varying number of smokers in the home, and whether children were present in the home or not. It was more effective for nonsmokers, those who smoked fewer cigarettes per day, and African Americans. Creating a smoke-free home was associated with a new smoke-free vehicle rule (odds ratio [OR] = 3.38, confidence interval [CI 2.58, 4.42]), decreased exposure to secondhand smoke among nonsmokers (b = -2.33, p < .0001), and increased cessation among smokers (OR = 5.8, CI [3.81, 8.81]). Use of each program component was significantly associated with success in creating a smoke-free home. Using an intent-to-treat effect size of 40.1%, program benefits from 5 years of health care savings exceed program costs yielding a net savings of $9,633 for delivery to 100 households. Cost effectiveness, subpopulation analyses, and identification of core elements can help in assessing the scalability potential of research-tested interventions such as this smoke-free homes program.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cost-effectiveness; scalability; smoke-free homes; tobacco control

Year:  2019        PMID: 31165637     DOI: 10.1177/1090198119848767

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Educ Behav        ISSN: 1090-1981


  1 in total

1.  Reducing Socioeconomic Disparities in Comprehensive Smoke-Free Rules among Households with Children: A Pilot Intervention Implemented through a National Cancer Program.

Authors:  Michael J Parks; Michelle C Kegler; John H Kingsbury; Iris W Borowsky
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-09-17       Impact factor: 3.390

  1 in total

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