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About
Problem: Despite encouraging use declines in the U.S. population, tobacco is still a leading cause of preventable disease and death. Current cessation treatments have limited success; two-thirds relapse within 6 months of a quit attempt. Existing smoking cessation interventions overwhelmingly focus on within-person processes of behavior change rather than socioenvironmental influences on cessation success. Cessation interventions based on evidence linking social stress to increased nicotine dependence and relapse risk are needed to address the stressors people who smoke encounter while navigating their social environments (i.e., social stress). Effective empowering approaches for infectious disease prevention and youth tobacco use suggest that Empowerment Theory may also enhance smoking cessation assistance for people experiencing high levels of social stress.
Hypothesis: Our hypothesis is that when people participate in community-serving volunteer activities, they may also experience cognitive and behavioral changes (i.e., enhanced stress coping, social support, self-worth, prosociality) that ameliorate the effects of social stress, thereby supporting smoking cessation.
Importance: Empowerment Theory-informed health behavior change approaches have worked for infectious disease prevention and youth tobacco interventions. Our pretest (N=20; Oklahoma) demonstrated the feasibility and acceptability of volunteer activity participation as an adjunct to standard smoking cessation treatment. This novel smoking cessation intervention uses an innovative, theory-based, local-yet-scalable approach to enhance individual outcomes through community engagement. To ensure scalability and accessibility of this remotely delivered intervention, we will utilize the NIH-supported Dissemination and Implementation (D&I) science framework, the Practical, Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model (PRISM), which is the contextually expanded version of RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance). This project will advance efforts to understand and address high tobacco use among people experiencing high levels of social stress and will inform a future R01 application for a fully-powered, multi-site RCT of ECHO aiming to end tobacco use across the U.S. while supporting community connectedness.
Full description
Specific Aims
Aim 1 (Inform): Prioritize factors associated with smoking cessation for people with high levels of social stress to inform volunteer activity protocol development for ECHO. We will use smartphone-administered ecological momentary assessment (EMA) to observe a 28-day naturalistic cessation attempt with N=60 adults with high levels of social stress recruited nationally. We will assess daily cessation-related experiences and behaviors, including evidence-based cessation factors (e.g., stress coping). These factors likely fluctuate within and across days, requiring EMA. Hypothesis: Stress coping, social support, self-worth, and prosociality will be associated with within- and day-level smoking abstinence, with largest effect sizes for social support and self-worth.
Aim 2 (Develop): Develop volunteer activity protocols likely to maximize smoking cessation success for people with high levels of social stress. With findings on prioritized cessation factors from Aim 1, our community partners, and our pretesting experience, we will develop a set of online volunteer activities that support participants' communities and harness key evidence-based cessation-promoting factors. Activities will be iteratively tested and refined with feedback from N=12 adults with high levels of social stress and volunteer activity facilitators in OK and SJV. These will form the basis of ECHO's refined core protocol that can be readily adapted in future intervention iterations.
Aim 3 (Pilot): Determine the feasibility, acceptability, and associations with quit self-efficacy and motivation of the developed ECHO protocol in two pilot sites. In a 2-arm, 12-week pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) with Week 24 follow up, N=50 adults from OK and SJV with high levels of social stress who are willing to quit smoking will be randomized to receive either the NCI's quitSTART smoking cessation smartphone app46 and free nicotine replacement therapy (NRT; control, n=25), or quitSTART and NRT plus ECHO, which includes online community-serving volunteer activities (≥4 sessions) and a digital hub (Reddit) to foster social support across sites. Key feasibility outcomes assessed at Week 12 include: intervention acceptability, quitSTART app engagement, NRT adherence, quit self-efficacy and motivation, smoking behavior, and cessation-promoting factors that we aim to activate with the volunteer activity protocols. Community partner outcomes will include volunteer hours and organizational visibility as assessed by participant records and key informant interviews. We will identify characteristics across volunteer activity protocols that best activated cessation-related factors.
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Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion/exclusion criteria (All Aims):
Individuals with serious psychological distress (i.e., score of 13 ≥ 18 on the Kessler PD Scale-6 19) will be excluded from all Aims because of likelihood of functional impairments that substantially interfere with one or more major life activities.
Aim 3 (Pilot RCT) inclusion criteria will be:
Aim 3 (Pilot RCT) exclusion criteria: Individuals will be excluded if currently using other smoking cessation treatments.
Sexual minority identity will be indicated by selecting any non-heterosexual response option(s) from: Heterosexual (Straight); Gay or Lesbian; Bisexual; Something else (please state)." Participants will indicate the sex assigned on their birth certificate (i.e., natal sex). Gender minority identity will be indicated by "Trans male/Trans man;" "Trans female/Trans woman;" "Gender queer/Gender non-conforming;" "Different identity (please state)" or a binary identity (male or female) non-concordant with natal sex. Current cigarette smoking will be indicated by ≥100 lifetime cigarettes and currently smoking cigarettes "every day" or "some days". High SGM stigma states are defined as the 22 states wherein ˂60% of the population 'thinks that homosexuality should be accepted'.21 High SGM stigma municipalities are defined as one of the 246 U.S. municipalities (out of the 496 scored from all U.S. states) that scored below the median (71) on the HRC Municipal Equality Index. Willingness to quit smoking will be assessed with a single item: "Are you willing to quit smoking cigarettes within 30 days after enrolling in this study? (yes/no)". To be classified as 'ready to quit smoking,' participants will report readiness to quit in the next 30 days and at least 1 past-year quit attempt (i.e., in the "Preparation" stage of change).
An equal number of female and male participants (i.e., natal sex) will be recruited so as to examine sex as a biological factor. Recruitment targets will aim to reflect the racial/ethnic composition of the populations from which the samples are drawn.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Julia M McQuoid, PhD; Jan Foisy
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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