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Remote Incentives for Smoking Cessation Among AN Pregnant Women

University of Vermont logo

University of Vermont

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Smoking
Smoking Cessation

Treatments

Behavioral: Best Practices
Behavioral: Smartphone-based Financial Incentives

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05019170
1558083

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cigarette smoking during pregnancy increases risk for catastrophic pregnancy complications, growth retardation, other adverse infant health problems, and later-in-life chronic conditions. One group that is particularly at risk for these complications are Alaska Native (AN) women. Prevalence of smoking during pregnancy is disproportionally high among AN women compared to US pregnant women overall (i.e., ~36% and ~13%, respectively) and few smoking-cessation interventions have been evaluated among this population. A substantive barrier to offering evidence-based interventions to AN women is the geographic remoteness of Alaska. The most effective intervention for promoting smoking cessation during pregnancy is financial incentives in which participants earn incentives (e.g., cash) contingent on objective evidence of smoking abstinence. This intervention has been adapted to be delivered entirely through a smartphone meaning that the geographic remoteness of Alaska will not be a barrier with this intervention. Participants submit videos of themselves completing breath and saliva tests, and incentives are then delivered through the application if the tests indicate smoking abstinence. Through a collaboration between the University of Vermont and the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, the goal of this study is to examine the preliminary feasibility and efficacy of this smartphone-based incentives intervention among AN women. Pregnant AN women will be recruited through ads posted on social media. Eligible participants who complete the informed consent process will be randomized to either: Best Practices or Best Practices + Incentives. In the Best Practices condition, participants will receive three brief educational sessions and a referral to the Alaska state quitline. In the Best Practices + Incentives condition, participants will receive the same education sessions and quitline referral, plus financial incentives contingent on the smartphone-based testing of breath and saliva specimens indicating abstinence from recent smoking. Outcomes will include point prevalence smoking abstinence at assessments conducted in late pregnancy and 4-, 8-, 12-, and 24-weeks postpartum, continuous abstinence during antepartum and postpartum, and perceived barriers and facilitators of treatment engagement. Overall, this project has the potential to address disparities in access to efficacious, evidence-based smoking cessation treatments among AN pregnant women.

Enrollment

5 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • ≥ 18 years of age
  • report being smokers at the time they learned of the current pregnancy
  • report smoking in the 7 days prior to completing their preliminary eligibility screening
  • < 25 weeks pregnant
  • speak English
  • own a smartphone (Android or iOS)
  • self-report as an Alaska Native
  • current smoker as verified by saliva cotinine test

Exclusion criteria

  • current or prior mental or medical condition that may interfere with study participation
  • smoke marijuana more than once each week and not willing to quit (marijuana smoking can inflate breath CO)
  • exposed to unavoidable occupational sources of CO (e.g., car mechanic)
  • report currently receiving opioid maintenance therapy (e.g., methadone, buprenorphine)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

5 participants in 2 patient groups

Best Practices + Incentives group
Experimental group
Description:
Participants assigned to this condition will receive the best practices treatment plus the financial incentives intervention.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Best Practices
Behavioral: Smartphone-based Financial Incentives
Best Practices
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants assigned to this condition will receive the best practices treatment alone.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Best Practices

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Diann Gaalema, PhD; Tyler G Erath, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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