Incentives to Promote Smoking Cessation in Low SES Women
NCT ID: NCT03173274
Last Updated: 2019-03-04
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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TERMINATED
NA
1 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-02-08
2018-03-03
Brief Summary
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Primary Aim: To compare the effects of a Brief Motivational Intervention (BMI) + mobile phone-based CM on tobacco use when compared to BMI with a non-contingent control condition in a small feasibility trial.
Hypothesis: The investigators expect women in the BMI + CM condition to have more smoke free days than women in the BMI + NC condition.
Secondary Aim: To examine alcohol use as a moderator of cessation outcomes.
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Detailed Description
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Counseling approaches that incorporate problem solving, skills training and social support are effective for reducing smoking in the general population (Fiore et al., 2008). However, given the high rates of smoking among alcohol-using women, they may be inadequate for in this population. Contingency management (CM) interventions, which provide tangible reinforcers contingent upon smoking abstinence or reduction to a criterion level, are highly-efficacious interventions for reducing cigarette smoking and other drug use in low-SES women (Higgins et al., 2012). Within the theoretical framework of operant conditioning, increasing the availability of an alternative reinforcer weakens the amount of control that the drug has over the user's behavior, especially when obtaining the alternative reinforcer is contingent on behaviors incompatible with drug use (Higgins, 1997). The tenets of CM interventions include (1) arranging the environment such that the target behavior can be readily and objectively detected, (2) providing a tangible reinforcer when the target behavior occurs, and (3) withholding reinforcement when the target behavior does not occur (Higgins et al., 1994).
Although CM interventions clearly are effective at promoting smoking reductions, there are several challenges associated with translating CM into an effective clinical treatment for smoking. Perhaps the most significant challenge is the frequent monitoring necessary to objectively verify smoking abstinence using breath carbon monoxide (CO), the most convenient objective measure of smoking status. Because of the short half-life of CO (5-6 hours), CO levels must be measured at least twice per day in order to verify continuous abstinence. Recent CM-smoking studies have addressed this feasibility challenge by providing study participants with breath CO monitors and laptop computers or smartphones to use in their own natural environments (e.g., Dallery, Raiff \& Grabinski, 2013). Participants are taught how to use their smartphones to text videos of themselves providing a breath CO level to a research staff member, twice per day. After the study staff has determined that the breath CO sample meets the abstinence criterion, participants are informed of the amount that they have earned for that sample.
Given the high rates of smoking in low-SES women, investigating the additive impact of an in-person brief counseling intervention and a phone-based CM intervention is an important next step in examining effective methods to reduce the impact of smoking in this population.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
BASIC_SCIENCE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Contingency Management (CM)
Those in the CM condition will continue to provide CO values twice-daily, and will receive escalating reinforcement values for CO values indicating continuous smoking abstinence (CO \< 6 ppm).
Brief Motivational Intervention
Participants in both groups will be given an BMI intervention in which they will be counseled to quit smoking.
Contingency Management
Contingent Reinforcement for negative breath CO samples
Non-Contingent Reinforcement
Participants in the NC condition will also provide CO levels twice-daily. However, their reinforcement will not be contingent upon their CO level but will be yoked to someone in the CM condition so that average reinforcer values are equivalent across the 2 conditions.
Brief Motivational Intervention
Participants in both groups will be given an BMI intervention in which they will be counseled to quit smoking.
Non-Contingent Reinforcement
Participants will receive reinforcement for submitting samples ona yoked schedule unrelated to CO sample value \[CM control\]
Interventions
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Brief Motivational Intervention
Participants in both groups will be given an BMI intervention in which they will be counseled to quit smoking.
Contingency Management
Contingent Reinforcement for negative breath CO samples
Non-Contingent Reinforcement
Participants will receive reinforcement for submitting samples ona yoked schedule unrelated to CO sample value \[CM control\]
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Smoke an average of at least ten cigarettes per day for at least 1 year
* Breath CO levels \> 8 ppm
* \>12 years of education
* Reliable and consistent access to a smart phone with video messaging capabilities
Exclusion Criteria
* Currently seeking treatment for smoking cessation.
* Currently using nicotine replacement therapies or other pharmacotherapies as cessation aid (intermittent use acceptable)
* No reliable access to a video-messaging smart phone
* Pregnancy
18 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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Brown University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Rachel N Cassidy
Assistant Professor
Locations
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Brown University School of Public Health
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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5-24001
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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