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Strategies to Help Adult ED Patients Quit Smoking

National Institutes of Health (NIH) logo

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Tobacco Use

Treatments

Behavioral: Motivational interview
Drug: transdermal nicotine patches

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

NIH

Identifiers

NCT00297466
DA017812

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a brief, focused intervention in the hospital emergency department is effective in helping adults quit smoking.

Full description

In urban communities, the prevalence of tobacco use among adults visiting a hospital emergency department (ED) nears 40%, well in excess of the 25% smoking prevalence rate of the general population. Many of these patients lack easy access to primary care, suggesting the ED may be an attractive locus to initiate tobacco cessation efforts. With over 100 million annual visits to U.S. EDs, it may be possible to engage millions of smokers in tobacco cessation efforts. The major purpose of this study is to examine whether a multicomponent intervention delivered in the ED by a Lay Educator to adult smokers interested in quitting is more likely to result in cessation than usual care. A secondary goal is to test whether patients who present to the ED with a tobacco-related illness (as indicated by ICD9 code) are more likely to quit than ED smokers with a non-tobacco-related condition. This will allow us to test the validity of the "teachable moment" as an opportune time to engage patients in considering a behavioral change. The proposed study is a randomized trial of a motivational interview, provision of six weeks' worth of nicotine patches, literature, and post-visit follow-up (Enhanced Care) vs. referral to a cessation clinic (Minimal Care) for ED patients who smoke. Eligibility criteria: age > 21 years, contemplation or preparation stage of change, not admitted to hospital. All patients will undergo a standardized stage of change assessment, and measurements of nicotine dependence and exhaled carbon monoxide. All will receive a cessation fact sheet and referral card to the smoking cessation clinic; the cards of those in the Enhanced Care group will have a specific appointment date and time. The Enhanced Care group will receive a language-appropriate pamphlet discussing smoking cessation. We will record the ICD9 codes associated with each visit. Major outcome measure: cessation within 3 months of the ED visit, stratified by treatment group. Secondary outcome measure: cessation within 3 months of the ED visit, stratified by whether the visit was smoking-related. If smokers receiving Enhanced Care are more likely to quit, then the ED could be considered a new, effective locus for tobacco control, potentially reaching several million smokers. If patients with a smoking-related diagnosis for the ED visit are more likely to quit than those with non-smoking-related ICD9, then this supports the construct of the teachable moment.

Enrollment

336 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

21+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • >= 10 cigarettes smoked daily
  • being discharged from the ED
  • contemplation or preparation stage of change
  • speaks English or Spanish

Exclusion criteria

  • being admitted to hospital
  • too ill to consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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