| Literature DB >> 31852536 |
Yvonne Olando1, Mary Kuria2, Muthoni Mathai2, Mark D Huffman3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rate of tobacco use among people with mental illness is nearly twice that of the general population. Psychotropic medications for tobacco cessation are relatively expensive for most Kenyans. Behavioral counseling and group therapy are effective lower cost strategies to promote tobacco cessation, yet have not been studied in Kenya among individuals with concomitant mental illness. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Kenya; Mental illness; Tobacco cessation; Tobacco dependence
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31852536 PMCID: PMC6921564 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-8040-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Group sessions and topics summary
| Time Frame | Group sessions |
|---|---|
| After signed consent | 5 As Ask- History of tobacco use Advice- On need to quit tobacco use, and inform on effects of tobacco use Assess- On readiness to quit tobacco use, if not ready use motivational skills to increase readiness Assist- Offer intervention support. Inform on behavioral coping skills and available pharmacotherapies Arrange- Arrange date, time and place of next session to introduce coping skills) |
| Session 1 (Week 1) | 7. Introduction to the program and reasons to quit tobacco use |
| Session 2 (Week 3) | 8. Benefits of quitting and understanding why we smoke and ways of quitting 9. setting quit date |
| Session 3 (Week 5) | 10. Withdrawal symptoms and social support |
| Session 4 (Week 7) | 11. Dealing with stress and anxiety and coping with depression |
| Session 5 (Week 9) | 12. Assertiveness training and anger management |
| Session 6 (Week 11) | 13. Tobacco-free lifestyle and dealing with high risk situations |
| Follow up sessions (Weeks 14–26) | 14. Round of discussion on participants’ feelings, cessation attempts, challenges experienced, and how they coped 15. Documentation of self-reported quit attempts 16. Supportive therapy |
Baseline, Follow-up activities and Data to be collected summary
| Follow-up time | Activity | Documentation |
|---|---|---|
Week 0 (Baseline) | • Socio-demographic questionnaire • Fagerstrom test for nicotine dependence • WHO quality of life (QOL) instrument | • Age of first use, duration of use, amount used, mental illness managed, other substances used • Fagerstrom test score • WHO QOL score |
| Week 4 | • Explored progress made and documented quit attempts • Focused on challenges experienced and how they were managed • Documented number of sticks currently smoked • Those reporting complete cessation and who gave consent for saliva testing, were then screened using cotinine test | • Quit attempts made • Amount currently being smoked • Cotinine test |
| Week 12 | • Explored progress made and documented quit attempts • Focused on challenges experienced and how they were managed • Documented number of sticks currently smoked • Those reporting complete cessation and who gave consent, were screened using cotinine test | • Quit attempts made • Amount currently being smoked • Cotinine test |
Week 26 (Final follow-up) | • Explored progress made and documented quit attempts • Focused on challenges experienced and how they were managed • Documented number of sticks currently smoked • Those reporting complete cessation, gave consent, then were screened using cotinine test • Administered WHO QOL instrument | • Recorded quit attempts made • Amount currently being smoked • Cotinine test • WHO QOL score |
| Ratio of intervention: controls (r) | 1 |
| Estimated proportion with improved outcomes in intervention group p1 | 35.0% |
| Estimated proportion with improved outcomes in control group p2 | 15.0% |
| Odds Ratio | 3.05 |
| Average of proportions (p1 + p2)/2 | 0.25 |
| Power (1-α/2) | 95% |
| Power (1-β) | 80% |
| Sample size per group | 37 |
| Sample size per group after adjusting for 30% attrition rate | 48 |