| Literature DB >> 33006560 |
Minda A Gowarty1,2,3, Nathan J Kung2, Ashley E Maher2, Meghan R Longacre2,4, Mary F Brunette2,3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Young adults with serious mental illness are over twice as likely to have tobacco use disorder than those in the general population and are less likely to utilize proven treatment methods during quit attempts. However, little research has evaluated the efficacy of interventions for this group. Smartphone apps may be an underutilized tool for tobacco use disorder among young adults with serious mental illness.Entities:
Keywords: digital health; mHealth; psychiatric illness; serious mental illness; smartphone application; smoking cessation; tobacco treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 33006560 PMCID: PMC7568217 DOI: 10.2196/19860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Form Res ISSN: 2561-326X
Focus group participant characteristics.
| Characteristic | Value, n (%) | ||
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| Male | 12 (54) |
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| Female | 10 (46) |
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| White | 18 (82) |
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| Mixed | 3 (14) |
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| I don't know | 1 (5) |
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| Psychotic disorder diagnosis | 9 (41) | |
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| Use internet ≥ twice daily | 18 (95) | |
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| Ever downloaded an app | 18 (95) | |
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| Ever downloaded a health app | 16 (84) | |
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| Would try an app if recommended by a doctor | 15 (79) | |
aTechnology use data were missing for 3 participants.
Major themes regarding app use for smoking cessation, with corresponding illustrative quotations.
| Themes | Illustrative quotation | ||
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| Providing ongoing motivation | “I think it’d be cool if you can be able to, like, challenge someone else who was trying to quit smoking, but like a buddy, right? But it’s through the app. And they could be thousands of miles away, but you got that one person...” [Group 5 Participant 2] | |
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| Increasing awareness of smoking patterns | “Tracking when you smoke, the times you smoke, how much a day you smoke, what led you to smoke that much. Like, I feel like those are all helpful things to know” [Group 4 Participant 1] | |
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| Providing distraction | “Yeah, ‘cause when you’re having a craving, you just look at it [the app] and maybe it’ll tell you, like, uh, go for an hour run, or you know, tell you some sort of structure to keep your mind off of you smoking. Something to keep you busy, keep your hands busy...” [Group 3 Participant 1] | |
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| Lack of external accountability | “...how is this going to know when I’m smoking a cigarette or not? I can just say I’m not...and then I’ll be sitting there smoking a cig, you know” [Group 2 Participant 4] | |
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| Possible triggers | “You’d have to use, like a code word for cigarette so people don’t think it in their heads because once they think ‘cigarette,’ they’re more likely to smoke” [Group 2 Participant 3] | |