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PROS Brief Smoking Cessation Counseling in Pediatric Practice to Reduce Secondhand Smoke Exposure of Young Children

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University of Rochester

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 1

Conditions

Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation
Smoking Cessation

Treatments

Behavioral: training in smoking cessation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators' long-term goal is to improve the quality of services targeting the prevention of secondhand smoke (SHS). Their specific aims are to:

  • refine components of office systems and counseling interventions for parental tobacco control in pediatric outpatient settings; and
  • pilot test the feasibility and efficacy of a parental tobacco control randomized controlled trial in pediatric office settings using 5 intervention and 5 comparison pediatric practice sites.

The investigators hypothesize that:

  • clinicians in intervention practices (compared to those in control practices) will more often implement successful office systems, screen for parental smoking, advise parents to quit and to prohibit smoking and SHS exposure at home, recommend pharmacotherapy, provide adjuncts, and refer parents to cessation programs; and
  • parents who smoke in intervention practices (measured by 3-month follow-up telephone surveys) will be more likely than those in control practices to have received cessation services, use pharmacotherapy, make lasting quit attempts, and institute rules to prohibit smoking and limit SHS exposure at home.

Full description

The investigators' long-term goal is to improve the quality of services targeting the prevention of secondhand smoke (SHS). Their specific aims are to:

  • refine components of office systems and counseling interventions for parental tobacco control in pediatric outpatient settings; and
  • pilot test the feasibility and efficacy of a parental tobacco control randomized controlled trial in pediatric office settings using 5 intervention and 5 comparison pediatric practice sites.

The investigators hypothesize that:

  • clinicians in intervention practices (compared to those in control practices) will more often implement successful office systems, screen for parental smoking, advise parents to quit and to prohibit smoking and SHS exposure at home, recommend pharmacotherapy, provide adjuncts, and refer parents to cessation programs; and
  • parents who smoke in intervention practices (measured by 3-month follow-up telephone surveys) will be more likely than those in control practices to have received cessation services, use pharmacotherapy, make lasting quit attempts, and institute rules to prohibit smoking and limit SHS exposure at home.

Enrollment

1,200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • PROS practices will be eligible to participate if they are located in a community-based setting with a non-institutionalized population.

  • Physicians are eligible if they are able and willing to provide informed consent and have a patient flow of several children per week, and are not currently participating in another PROS study. They also must be able to read and speak English.

  • Eligible parents will:

    • be parents or guardians age 18 or older;
    • be parents of a child aged 0-6;
    • have access to a telephone; and
    • be able to speak/read English.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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