| Literature DB >> 31182134 |
Ratna Sohanpal1, Sandra Jumbe2, Wai-Yee James2, Liz Steed2, Tammy Yau3, Carol Rivas4, Vichithranie Madurasinghe2, Colin Houlihan2, Vlad Berdunisov2, Matthew Taylor5, Stephanie J C Taylor2, Chris Griffiths2, Sandra Eldridge2, Robert Walton2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: NHS community pharmacies provide effective smoking cessation services; however, there is scope for increasing throughput and improving quit rates. This trial examines whether the Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies (STOP) intervention can improve smoker engagement to increase service throughput, retention and quitting.Entities:
Keywords: Behaviour change; Cluster randomised controlled trial; Community pharmacy; Quit rate; Recruitment; Retention; Smoking cessation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31182134 PMCID: PMC6558670 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-3368-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Flow diagram of progress of clusters and individuals through phases of the trial. STOP Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies
Fig. 2PRECIS-2 diagram illustrating that the trial lies towards the pragmatic end of the pragmatic–explanatory continuum. The Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies trial was scored for each of nine domains from 1 = very explanatory to 5 = very pragmatic in group discussion with trialists and methodologists, and the results are displayed as a radar diagram [21]. PRECIS PRagmatic Explanatory Continuum Indicator Summary
Fig. 3Illustration of the organisational structure of community pharmacies in England [24]. Proprietor (owner): if owns five or less community pharmacies, pharmacy is referred to as independent; if owns more than five community pharmacies, pharmacy is referred to as chain
Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies (STOP) trial data collection
| Outcome/type of tissue sample | Description/process of data collection | Time of collection/follow-up point | Source of data |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Throughput | From service commissioners | Received quarterly after STOP training intervention and study recruitment of service users | Routinely collected data under gatekeeper agreement (includes 12 months of historical pharmacy outcome data prior to randomisation date) |
| 4-week retention rate | From service commissioners | Received quarterly after STOP training intervention and study recruitment of service users | Routinely collected data under gatekeeper agreement (includes 12 months of historical pharmacy outcome data prior to randomisation date) |
| 4-week quit rate | From service commissioners | Received quarterly after STOP training intervention and study recruitment of service users | Routinely collected data under gatekeeper agreement (includes 12 months of historical pharmacy outcome data prior to randomisation date) |
| Continuous abstinence rate at 6 months | Consented participants who quit at 4 weeks are contacted at 6 months by a study researcher to ask: (i) their quit status—if response is yes (abstinent), a cotinine saliva collection kit is sent by post with instructions to give sample and return kit to ABS Laboratories in freepost envelope provided (ii) if participants completed the NCSCT questionnaire that was given to them at end of NHS SSP week 4—if response is no, the questionnaire is completed with researcher by telephone or sent by post with instructions to complete and return to study team in freepost envelope provideda | At 6 months if participant had quit at 4 weeks | Directly from individually consented service users for additional data collection |
| Detailed analysis on the effectiveness of the STOP training intervention | Data collected from STOP study participants comprise record number, exempt from prescription charge, gender, pregnant, age, occupation, ethnicity, national ethnicity, source of referral, referral by, patient practice, first session date, advisor name and nicotine replacement therapy products used. Data collected are anonymised. No personal details are recorded or used by the study team | At end of study | From individually consented service users for additional data collection (i.e. collected as routine data) |
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| Satisfaction about the NHS SSP | NCSCT (short) satisfaction survey | Post 4 weeks of the NHS SSP | Directly from smoker service users (individually consented) |
| Self-efficacy in smoking cessation delivery | Assessing self-efficacy in delivery of smoking cessation using previously developed Likert scale [ | At baseline and at 5 months from date of written consent | Directly from pharmacy staff |
| Study recruitment and retention rates. Reasons for non-participation and dropout | (i) Estimate study participation rate of (a) pharmacies (i.e. number of pharmacies recruited/total number approached to participate) and (b) pharmacy staff (i.e. number of pharmacy staff recruited/total number present in participating pharmacy and approached to participate) (ii) Estimate study retention rate of (a) pharmacies (i.e. number of pharmacies who dropped out/number recruited) and (b) pharmacy staff (i.e. number of pharmacy staff who dropped out/number recruited) (iii) Reasons for study non-participation and withdrawal among pharmacy staff | Recorded by study team | |
| Intervention attendance and completion rates. Reasons for non-attendance and dropout | (i) Estimate STOP training intervention (a) attendance (i.e. number of staff who attended training/number assigned/who agreed to receive the intervention) and (b) dropout rates among pharmacy staff (i.e. number who dropped out of training/number attended) (ii) Reasons for non-attendance and non-completion | To be recorded by study team | |
| Acceptability of intervention training and delivery in practice | Questionnaire using previously developed Likert scale [ | At 5 months post written consent date | Directly from intervention pharmacy staff |
| Fidelity assessment at the pharmacy counter | Assessment of delivery of skills in practice at the pharmacy counter (in all 60 pharmacies) around engagement of service users into the NHS SSP via simulated clients using checklist developed for study | 4–6 weeks post training | Directly from pharmacy staff |
| Fidelity assessment in pharmacy consultation room | Assessment of skills (from 33% of 30 intervention pharmacies, | 4–6 weeks post training | Directly from intervention audio-recordings of pharmacy staff |
| Views and experiences about the STOP training and its delivery in practice. | Interview data about views of the STOP training intervention and delivery of learnt skills in practice, reasons for non-attendance and non-completion | 4 weeks post training | Directly from intervention pharmacy staff |
| Study recruitment and retention rates for additional data collection | (i) Estimate participation rate of smoker service users in the STOP study for additional data collection (i.e. total number of smokers who joined the NHS SSP and gave individual written consent/total number who joined the NHS SSP) (ii) Estimate service user retention rate in STOP study (i.e. number of consented service users who dropped out or are lost to follow up/total number of consented service users) | To be recorded by study team | |
| Views and experiences about the NHS SSP with a focus on engagement and retention, reasons for completion and non-completion of the NHS SSP | Interview data about experience of the NHS SPP focusing on engagement and retention into the programme, reasons for non-completion of the programme | Post 4 weeks of the NHS SSP | Directly from service users |
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| Saliva sample and DNA | Biochemical assessment of nicotine and DNA extraction and storage | At the end of the first session of the NHS SSP | Directly from individually consented smoker service users |
| Saliva sample | Cotinine assessment for continued abstinence | At 6 months among those who quit at 4 weeks of the NHS SSP | Directly from individually consented smoker service users |
The focus of this study is only to collect the tissue samples and extract and store the DNA and assess salivary cotinine at 6 months to confirm cessation—critical to report for this study outcome
NCSCT National Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training, NHS SSP National Health Service Stop Smoking Programme
aA £10 voucher is sent in the same post to incentivise return of the questionnaire and saliva kit. Those not returning the questionnaire or kit are contacted a maximum of three times by the study team by telephone [26]
Fig. 4Process of recruitment. NHS SSP, National Health Service Stop Smoking Programme, STOP Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies
Baseline demographics
| Baseline demographics | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmacy information | Contractor code, type of pharmacy (independent/chain), total number of staff (both full-time and part-time), number of stop smoking advisors, number of pharmacy support staff. The study team also obtain the number of prescriptions dispensed monthly for each participating pharmacy from the Pharmacy and Appliance Contractor Dispensing data report (publicly available) [ | At baseline | Directly from consented pharmacist/advisor |
| Pharmacy staff | Job title, highest education level, age, gender, smoking status | At baseline | Directly from consented pharmacist, advisor and support staff |
Fig. 5Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) figure. CO carbon monoxide, GCP Good Clinical Practice, NCSCT National Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training, NHS SSP, National Health Service Stop Smoking Programme, STOP Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies