Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trial
Official title:
Innovative Web-Based Intervention for Smoking Cessation Among College Students
Tobacco use is the leading cause of cancer death in the U.S. Because smokers who quit by age 30 have cancer death risk similar to non-smokers, promoting cessation early in life is critical. U.S. colleges/universities, enrolling >14 million students/year (40% of those aged 18 to 24), are an important venue to reach young adult smokers. While daily tobacco use in the U.S. has declined to 18.1%, nondaily smoking (smoking on some days but not every day) is increasing, particularly among young adults and African Americans. Moreover, young smokers and nondaily smokers (half of young adult smokers), respectively, are less likely to seek help in quitting; thus, innovative strategies are needed to assist cessation early in life, particularly among those who may not be motivated to quit or seek help. Unfortunately, no research has focused on developing a cessation intervention that addresses a broad range of smoking patterns (nondaily to daily smoking) or diverse campus settings among ethnically diverse student populations. Web-based interventions offer promise in helping college students to quit, given high rates of Internet use and web capacity to provide tailored cessation messages. A novel approach to delivering cessation information via the web might be to address broader lifestyle issues and apply market research strategies to identify market segments of smokers (groups of people with similar interests, goals, values) in order to target and engage these groups more effectively. Applying this strategy to an online cessation intervention should enhance both intervention use and processing of intervention messages, leading to greater abstinence rates. The investigators aim to: (1) develop and refine a tailored web-based intervention for smoking cessation targeting college students with a range of smoking levels; (2) test the usability, acceptability, and feasibility of the intervention among college student smokers; and (3) determine the potential effect of the intervention on smoking cessation, smoking level, quit attempts, and contextual factors.
Tobacco use is the leading cause of cancer death. Because smokers who quit by 30 have cancer
death risk similar to non-smokers, promoting cessation early in life is critical. U.S.
colleges/universities, enrolling >14 million students/year (40% of those aged 18 to 24), are
an important venue to reach young adult smokers. While daily tobacco use in the U.S. has
declined to 18.1%, nondaily smoking (smoking on some days but not every day) is increasing,
particularly among young adults and African Americans. Moreover, young smokers and nondaily
smokers (half of young adult smokers9), respectively, are less likely to seek help in
quitting; thus, innovative strategies are needed to assist cessation early in life,
particularly among those who may not be motivated to quit or seek help. Unfortunately, no
research has focused on developing a cessation intervention that addresses a broad range of
smoking patterns (nondaily to daily smoking) or diverse campus settings among ethnically
diverse student populations. Web-based interventions offer promise in helping college
students to quit, given high rates of Internet use and web capacity to provide tailored
cessation messages. A novel approach to delivering cessation information might be to address
broader lifestyle issues and apply market research strategies such as those used by the
tobacco industry to identify market segments of smokers (groups of people with similar
interests, goals, values) in order to target and engage these groups more effectively.
Applying this strategy to an online cessation intervention should enhance both intervention
use and processing of intervention messages, leading to greater abstinence rates.
Our specific aims are:
- Aim 1: To develop and refine a tailored web-based intervention for smoking cessation
targeting young adults representing a range of sociodemographic backgrounds,
particularly including those from low SES and African American backgrounds, and a range
of smoking levels (i.e., nondaily, low-level smokers to daily, heavy smokers) attending
college.
- Aim 2: To test the usability, acceptability, and feasibility of the intervention among
a sample of college student smokers.
- Aim 3: To determine the potential effect of the intervention on smoking cessation,
smoking level, quit attempts, and contextual factors (e.g., mood, alcohol use, social
factors) among a sample of college student smokers from various backgrounds and smoking
patterns.
This research will be addressed through three phases. Phase 1 will involve the development
of the web-site infrastructure, securing incentives, developing website content (dramas,
stories), and developing the tailored feedback infrastructure. Phase 2 will involve expert
feedback, which will be integrated into the next program version. Phase 3 involves a 6-week
trial among a small sample of young adults at two college campuses (university;
community/technical college) in Georgia (N = 200). At end-of-intervention, we will assess
usability, acceptability, and feasibility of the program; smoking status and level; and
psychosocial factors related to smoking (e.g. alcohol use, mood). Assessments of smoking
status/level and psychosocial factors will also be conducted at 6 weeks post-intervention.
The primary outcomes in the trial are usability, acceptability, and feasibility
(self-reported and observed website utilization [check-in, activity]). Secondary outcomes
include: (1) message processing (self-reported attention to messages, perceived relevance,
and other message use items);19 (2) 7-day and 30-day point prevalence abstinence at
end-of-treatment (6 weeks) and at 6-week follow-up (12 weeks) in order to appropriately
examine cessation among daily and nondaily smokers; (3) smoking level at 6 and 12 weeks; (4)
number of quit attempts since baseline; and (5) change in other contextual factors (mood,
alcohol use, social aspects).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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