Health Behaviour Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Role of Self-Incentives in Smoking Cessation: A Randomised Controlled Trial Within a Local Prison
Tobacco use is the greatest cause of ill health and early mortality, and smoking is the main contributor to around 75,000 deaths a year in England. The aim of the present research is to test the effect of helping people to reward themselves when they have successfully abstained from smoking and the impact this will have on subsequent smoking cessation. Each participant will be randomly allocated to one of four conditions. The trial requires 159 participants to perform an fully powered statistical analysis. The four conditions include: (1) a control condition (asked to form a plan to quit smoking), (2) an implementation intention condition (asked to form a more specific 'if-then' plan), (3) baseline which include: (1) a control condition (asked to form a plan to quit smoking), (2) a volitional help sheet condition (asked to link temptations with appropriate behavioural responses), (3) a weekly self-incentivising condition (asked to reward themselves at the end of each week that they have successfully abstained from smoking), or (4) a monthly self-incentivising condition (asked to reward themselves at the end of each month that they have successfully abstained from smoking). The main outcome measure will be smoking quit status, which will be verified biochemically at the end of the stop smoking programme, and at six-months post quit date.
The research aims to test the role of self-incentivising implementation intentions in smoking
cessation among prisoners aged 18 and over, enrolling on a stop smoking programme provided by
Livewire within Risley Prison. The effectiveness of self-incentives has been successfully
seen previously within health behaviour change, but not within smoking cessation (ongoing
randomised controlled trial in alongside community stop smoking services, and local
workplaces). This research will build on this by testing the effectiveness of self-incentives
in prisoners' stop smoking attempts.
This study is a randomised controlled trial with the between participants factor of condition
which has four levels:
1. Control (plan) 2 Self-generated implementation intention (if-then plan) 3. Weekly
self-incentivising implementation intention 4. Monthly self-incentivising implementation
intention
The within participants' factor will be time which has three levels:
1. Baseline (T1)
2. Follow-up (T2) (end of stop smoking programme)
3. Follow-up (T3) (six months post quit date)
An ethical concern is that participants in the control condition may struggle more to quit
smoking as they will not have the additional benefits of being within an experimental
condition which uses self-incentives to aid their quit attempt. A control condition is needed
to monitor if quitting smoking is due to the use of self-incentives or another behaviour
change technique.
The recruitment process will involve the researcher (Emma Brown) administering study packs to
the potential participants. The participant information sheet will be read to each
participant and time will be provided to ask any questions. If the participant agrees to take
part in the research and complete the questionnaire, then this will be completed with the
help of the researcher (Emma Brown) if required. Questionnaires will be placed in a sealed
envelope and returned to the University of Manchester by the researcher (Emma Brown).
All participants who are able to provide informed consent and are over the age of 18 years
old are eligible to take part in the study. Unfortunately, the study does not cater for
people who cannot understand English at the present time, although this will be monitored for
amendments in future studies. The study will use a paper format as not to exclude those
participants who have limited or no access to the internet.
The participant information sheet included within the study pack alongside the questionnaire
includes details about the study, costs and benefits of taking part in the study, and the
right to consent and withdraw at any point throughout the study. There are no risks involved
in taking part in the study. There is a minimal burden in time taken to complete the baseline
questionnaire to take no longer than 15 minutes and the further two follow-up questionnaires
to take no longer than 10 minutes.
In terms of confidentiality, participants are asked to form a personal identification code to
match baseline and follow-up questionnaires once completed.
There are no conflicts of interest. Results will be fed back to all participating services
and participants involved in the study, should they indicate for a summary of the results.
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