A pre-post pilot study of a brief, web-based intervention to engage disadvantaged smokers into cessation treatment

被引:18
作者
Brunette M.F. [1 ]
Gunn W. [1 ,2 ]
Alvarez H. [2 ]
Finn P.C. [2 ]
Geiger P. [1 ]
Ferron J.C. [1 ]
McHugo G.J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Department of Psychiatry, Psychiatric Research Center, 105 Pleasant St, Concord, 03301, NH
[2] Concord Hospital, Family Health Center, Concord
关键词
Disadvantaged populations; Motivation; Technology; Tobacco cessation;
D O I
10.1186/s13722-015-0026-5
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: People with low education and/or income are more likely to smoke, less likely to quit, and experience disparately poor health outcomes compared to those with education and income advantage. Cost-effective strategies are needed to inform and engage this group into effective cessation treatments. We developed a novel, web-based, motivational, decision-support system that was designed to engage disadvantaged smokers into tobacco cessation treatment. We piloted the system among smokers in a primary care safety net clinic. Methods: Thirty-nine eligible subjects were assessed at baseline and used the decision-support system; 38 were assessed 2 months later. Chi-square or Fisher's exact tests were used to assess whether participants who used the program were more likely to use cessation treatment than a randomly selected group of 60 clinic patients. Results: Thirty-nine percent of smokers initiated cessation treatment after using the decision-support system, compared to 3 percent of the comparison group (Fisher's exact = 21.2; p = 0.000). Over 10 percent achieved continuous abstinence over the 2-month follow-up. Users were satisfied with the program - 100 percent stated they would recommend it to a friend. Conclusions: Our data indicate that this web-based, motivational, decision-support system is feasible, satisfactory, and promising in its ability to engage smokers into cessation treatment in a primary care safety net clinic. Further evaluation research is warranted. © 2015 Brunette et al.; licensee BioMed Central.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 59 条
[1]  
Annual smoking-attributable mortality, years of potential life lost, and productivity losses - United States, 1997-2001, MMWR, 54, 25, pp. 625-628, (2005)
[2]  
Escobedo L.G., Peddicord J.P., Smoking prevalence in US birth cohorts: The influence of gender and education, Am J Public Health, 86, 2, pp. 231-236, (1996)
[3]  
State-specific prevalence of cigarette smoking and smokeless tobacco use among adults - United States, 2009, MMWR, 59, 43, pp. 1400-1406, (2010)
[4]  
Stringhini S., Shipley M., Brunner E., Nabi H., Kivimaki M., Singh-Manoux A., Association of socioeconomic position with health behaviors and mortality, JAMA, 303, 12, pp. 1159-1166, (2010)
[5]  
Mackenbach J.P., Stirbu I., Roskam A.J., Schaap M.M., Menvielle G., Leinsalu M., Kunst A.E., Socioeconomic inequalities in health in 22 European countries, N Engl J Med, 358, 23, pp. 2468-2481, (2008)
[6]  
Jha P., Peto R., Zatonski W., Boreham J., Jarvis M.J., Lopez A.D., Social inequalities in male mortality, and in male mortality from smoking: Indirect estimation from national death rates in England and Wales, Poland, and North America, Lancet, 368, 9533, pp. 367-370, (2006)
[7]  
Garrett B.E., Dube S.R., Trosclair A., Caraballo R.S., Pechacek T.F., Cigarette smoking - United States, 1965-2008, MMWR, 60, pp. 109-114, (2011)
[8]  
Welte J.W., Barnes G.M., Tidwell M.C., Hoffman J.H., Tobacco use, heavy use, and dependence among adolescents and young adults in the United States, Subst Use Misuse, 46, 9, pp. 1090-1098, (2011)
[9]  
Hiscock R., Bauld L., Amos A., Fidler J.A., Munafo M., Socioeconomic status and smoking: A review, Ann N y Acad Sci, 1248, pp. 107-123, (2012)
[10]  
Barbeau E.M., Krieger N., Soobader M.J., Working class matters: Socioeconomic disadvantage, race/ethnicity, gender, and smoking in NHIS 2000, Am J Public Health, 94, 2, pp. 269-278, (2004)