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Efficacy of Brief MI Delivered Via Mobile Instant Messaging to Help Unmotivated Smokers With Chronic Diseases to Quit

The University of Hong Kong (HKU) logo

The University of Hong Kong (HKU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Smoking Cessation

Treatments

Behavioral: Brief MI intervention
Behavioral: Placebo intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04890223
NTWCREC19001_R1

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to examine the efficacy of brief MI delivered by mobile instant messaging tools in promoting smoking cessation among unmotivated smokers with chronic diseases. Participants in the intervention group will receive a brief MI intervention while the control group will receive a placebo intervention.

Full description

Smoking plays a causal role in the development of chronic diseases and may increase the risk of disease progression or recurrence, elevate the risk of mortality, and reduce the efficacy of treatment for disease sufferers. However, a majority of smokers with chronic diseases are unmotivated, having no intention to quit. These characteristics underscore the critical need for appropriate and effective smoking cessation interventions targeting this population. Nevertheless, most existing smoking cessation services are generic, and none seems to target smokers suffering from chronic diseases. A systematic review indicated that no study had yet examined the efficacy of a smoking cessation intervention designed specifically for unmotivated smokers with chronic diseases. Though MI was effective in promoting smoking cessation among the general population, was not effective for smokers with chronic diseases, who as has been seen tend to be unmotivated smokers. Brief MI, accordingly, is better suited to reaching these smokers in clinical settings, but the application of this approach to smoking cessation contexts has not been well studied.

The proposed intervention will be designed to promote smoking cessation among unmotivated smokers with chronic diseases. To reduce the influence of the participants' baseline characteristics on the efficacy of the intervention, this study will be designed to motivate them to change a selected unfavourable behaviour as a means to reduce their resistance to the intervention. The foot-in-the-door technique served both to facilitate the recruitment for the study and to enhance the participants' compliance with the intervention, in the latter case by promoting change in their selected unfavourable behaviour as a preliminary to further change. The rationale is that a small successful step increases readiness to take a further, larger step, in this case, smoking cessation.

Given that the exponential growth in the number of users of mobile instant messaging tools, they represent a resource for efforts to promote health and enhance treatment compliance. These were among the considerations that informed the development in this study of an intervention using brief MI delivered by mobile instant messaging tools to facilitate smoking cessation among unmotivated smokers with chronic diseases.

Enrollment

728 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Hong Kong Chinese over the age of 17
  • Had smoked at least one cigarette per day over the previous three months
  • Had been diagnosed with at least one chronic disease
  • Able to speak Cantonese and read Chinese
  • Willing to take action to improve their health but had no intention to quit smoking
  • Had a smartphone and were able to use mobile instant messaging tools
  • Willing to receive health promotion advice and communicate through mobile instant messaging

Exclusion criteria

  • Participating in other smoking cessation programs or services
  • With mental or cognitive impairment or communication problems

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

728 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Intervention group
Experimental group
Description:
The participants in the intervention group will be asked to identify an unfavourable behaviour that they wish to change when filling out the baseline questionnaire. The research nurse will conduct the individual face-to-face brief MI interviews for this purpose, which will last for approximately five to ten minutes. After the face-to-face brief MI interviews, the participants in the intervention group will receive brief MI messages individually by means of mobile instant messaging for six months from the baseline. After six months, the brief MI messages will cease to be delivered to the participants in the intervention group, with whom the research team will then maintain only minimal contact until the 12-month follow-up.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Brief MI intervention
Control group
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Participants in the control group will be asked to identify an unfavourable behaviour that they want to change at the baseline but, rather than brief MI interviews delivered face-to-face, received generic health advice consultations on the selected unfavourable behaviour that lasted approximately five to ten minutes. Each participant will receive a self-help smoking cessation booklet titled Be Smart, Quit Smoking! published by the Hong Kong Council on Smoking and Health with information about the negative health consequences of smoking, reasons to quit, strategies for quitting, and smoking cessation services available in Hong Kong along with a public quitline number (specifically, 1833183). Those who express the intention to quit at follow-ups will receive usual smoking cessation support.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Placebo intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ho Cheung William Li, PhD; Long Kwan Laurie Ho, MPhil

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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