Feasibility trial of a Facebook quit smoking
Transcription
Feasibility trial of a Facebook quit smoking
vs. 1 2 The Tobacco Status Project – Smoking cessation for young adults on Facebook Johannes Thrul, PhD & Danielle E. Ramo, PhD Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education Department of Psychiatry UCSF 9/25/2015 Danielle E. Ramo, PhD (PI) Alexandra B. Klein, BA Kathryn Chavez, BA Howard Liu, MS Giuseppe Cavaleri, BA Markus Sommer, BSc readi.ucsf.edu Collaborators: Kevin Delucchi, PhD Funding Sharon Hall, PhD NIDA K23 DA032578 Judith Prochaska, PhD, MPH NIDA P50 DA09253 Pamela Ling, MD, MPH NCI R25 CA113710 4 readi.ucsf.edu Smoking cessation in young adulthood Cigarette smoking peaks in young adulthood • 30.6% of young adults in the US currently smoke Young adult smokers underutilize professional smoking cessation support A majority try to quit without using any assistance Novel approaches have to be developed that engage young adult smokers and help them quit! 5 Social media use among online young adults (18-29) Source: Pew Internet and American Life Project 6 Engagement in Online interventions Online interventions have small but significant effects Facebook smoking cessation interventions could reach large numbers of young adult smokers Low participant engagement is a critical obstacle An intervention tailored to readiness to quit smoking would likely appeal to the widest range of young adult smokers 7 Goals Design a Facebook intervention based on the Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Transtheoretical model. Enroll at least 48 participants into study-run secret Facebook groups matched on readiness to quit smoking. Determine feasibility of all intervention/research components, engagement, and initial efficacy (quit rates, quit attempts, readiness to quit). 8 Recruitment Facebook paid ads $8.80 per eligible, consented participant Participant incentives: Up to $90 incentives for engagement and up to $100 for completing all surveys 9 Recruitment 10 Study design feasibility trial 79 participants 7 groups Intervention 90 daily posts Baseline 11 3-month follow-up 6-month follow-up 12-month follow-up Intervention 90 Daily posts to “secret” Facebook groups tailored to readiness to quit Weekly “The Dr. Is In” sessions Optional 7-session cognitive-behavioral counseling 12 Facebook newsfeed 13 Not ready to quit (Precontemplation) 14 Thinking about quitting (Contemplation) 15 15 Getting ready to quit (Preparation) Having a phrase or mantra that you can repeat to yourself when things get tough can be a HUGE help to deal with cravings. Think of your own mantra and post it here. 16 16 Sample participant reactions: Repeat your Mantra 17 17 “The Doctor Is In” 18 18 “The Doctor Is In” 19 19 “Smoking cessation advice sessions” 20 20 Feasibility trial: Sample characteristics (N = 79) 20.8 years old, 79% male, 80% Caucasian 75% daily smokers, 10.7 cigarettes per day 52% smoked within 30 min of waking 57% quit attempt in past year 30% no goal, 60% reduction goal, 10% abstinence goal 42% not ready, 46% thinking, 13% getting ready 21 22 Results Engagement Participants in Precontemplation and Contemplation engaged most when prompted to think about the pros and cons of behavior change Participants in Preparation engaged most when posts increased awareness about smoking Eliciting negative emotions about smoking and having participants take small steps towards cessation (and sharing these steps) generated below average engagement in Contemplation 23 Biochemical verification of self reports (saliva cotinine kit) 24 Efficacy – 7-Day Point Prevalence Abstinence (N=79) 25 Finished recruitment of 501 participants in July 2015 Intervention phase will be finished in October 2015 Overall one year for recruitment and intervention Up to 12-month follow-up (3, 6, and 12 months) 26 Conclusions Social media smoking cessation interventions have potential to… • recruit young adult smokers • generate daily engagement • help them quit smoking Tailoring intervention content to readiness to quit smoking is important 27