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Comparing Smartphone to In-person Training to Scale Up a Tobacco Control Program for Teachers in India

P

President and Fellows of Harvard College

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Tobacco Use Cessation

Treatments

Behavioral: In person training
Behavioral: Smart phone based training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05500235
R01CA248910-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
IRB20-2157

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to compare the implementation and effectiveness of the Tobacco-Free Teachers, Tobacco-Free Society (TFT-TFS) program when delivered through in-person training vs. a smartphone-based training model. Investigators will conduct a comparative effectiveness trial using a cluster-randomized design in which headmasters at schools in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh (MP) will be trained in person or via a smartphone to deliver TFT-TFS in their schools. Schools will be randomly assigned to each training arm, and investigators will compare program effectiveness (tobacco use cessation), implementation outcomes, and program cost and reach.

Full description

Tobacco-related deaths are rising rapidly in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). India's population is the second largest consumer of tobacco products in the world: 29% of the adult population uses smoked, smokeless, or both forms of tobacco, and around 1.2 million die each year from tobacco-related causes. Reducing tobacco-related deaths in LMICs will require large-scale implementation of evidence-based interventions (EBIs) that promote tobacco control. Currently, the implementation of tobacco control EBIs in LMICs relies on in-person training, which has inherent logistical challenges that limit the ability to scale up these programs. New training models are needed to ensure tobacco control EBIs can be implemented broadly, rapidly, and at low cost, especially in rural and under-resourced areas where tobacco use is prevalent.

The long-term goal is to identify effective, low-resource strategies to promote the broad-based implementation of tobacco control EBIs in LMICs. In India, school teachers are respected community leaders, role models, and an important channel for promoting tobacco control in schools and society. Investigators previously demonstrated the effectiveness of the Tobacco-Free Teachers, Tobacco-Free Society (TFT-TFS) program in a cluster-randomized study of schoolteachers in Bihar state, India. Tobacco use cessation rates were doubled among teachers in intervention schools compared to control schools, along with significant improvements in the adoption and implementation of tobacco control policies. As a critical next step in scaling up the TFT-TFS tobacco control EBI, investigators are focusing on expanding the training of those implementing the program in schools, i.e., school headmasters. The investigators will compare two models of TFT-TFS training of headmasters-in-person vs. smartphone-based-and the effect of each approach on TFT-TFS program implementation and effectiveness. India has the world's second-largest mobile phone user subscription base of 1.2 billion, with good penetration even in rural areas. The use of smartphones in educational settings is already pervasive in India, offering a readily available, low-cost strategy for expanding training of the TFT-TFS program. Training via smartphones can be delivered anytime and anywhere and allows flexibility and individualization of the learning experience through on-demand access to training content and virtual interactions among trainees. By delivering TFT-TFS training through smartphones, the program's potential reach can be multiplied over what can be achieved with in-person training.

Investigators will conduct a comparative effectiveness trial using a cluster-randomized design in which headmasters of schools in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh (MP) will be randomly assigned to receive in-person training or training via smartphone for the TFT-TFS program. Once trained, headmasters in both groups will implement the TFT-TFS program within schools. Investigators will compare the training arms regarding program effectiveness (tobacco use cessation), implementation, cost, and reach.

Enrollment

2,040 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

All teachers and principals employed in schools in both study arms

Exclusion criteria

• None

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

2,040 participants in 2 patient groups

Smart phone based training
Experimental group
Description:
Smartphone-based training for Headmasters to implement the Tobacco Free Teachers-Tobacco Free Society program in their schools in Madhya Pradesh, India
Treatment:
Behavioral: Smart phone based training
In person training
Experimental group
Description:
In person training for Headmasters to implement the Tobacco Free Teachers-Tobacco Free Society program in their schools in Madhya Pradesh, India
Treatment:
Behavioral: In person training

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Eve Nagler, ScD, MPH; Smita Warke

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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