View clinical trials related to Smoking Cessation.
Filter by:A single arm pilot study conducted to assess the feasibility of having Manitoba Pharmacists provide support (product and cognitive) to low-income (receiving social assistance) smokers wishing to quit smoking.
This study will test the efficacy of a cessation intervention for caregivers in a large, inner-city Pediatric Emergency Department. The investigators will randomize 750 caregivers who smoke who present to our Pediatric Emergency Department with their child who has a Second Hand Smoke exposure-related illness to either one of two conditions: 1) Screening, Brief Intervention, and Assisted Referral to Treatment (SBIRT); or 2) Healthy Habits Control (HHC). The Screening, Brief Intervention, and Assisted Referral to Treatment condition will include a brief form of the Clinical Practice Guideline: Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence, motivational interviewing, engaging and personalized materials on the effects of smoking and Second Hand Smoke exposure, immediate access to caregivers' choice of cessation resources (e.g., Quitline, smokefree.gov, or txt2quit), a 12-week supply of nicotine replacement therapy and weekly booster materials for 12 weeks. The Healthy Habits Control program will be used as an attention control in which caregivers will receive instruction on healthy lifestyle choices to improve the child's health.
Almost one-fifth of US adults are current cigarette smokers. To make further progress in lowering prevalence, it would help to increase the proportion of smokers attempting to quit. This application tests a novel approach to motivating smokers to quit, based on an empirically supported theory of anxiety. The approach uses guided imagery to increase smokers' sense of urgency about preventing the negative health consequences of smoking.
A randomised trial to determine whether e-cigarettes (with and without nicotine) combined with nicotine patches and behavioural support can assist smokers in remaining abstinent for at least six months.
The study is designed to evaluate the efficacy of a cigarette reduction intervention using a novel device called the Quitbit, a digital lighter paired with a smartphone mobile application, to enhance self-regulatory techniques for reducing cigarettes smoked per day toward cessation.
The purpose of this study is to test the effects of a group smoking cessation program. The study will also examine individual differences in response to the intervention program.
This study has the following objectives: 1. To raise the awareness of female smokers about the harmfulness of tobacco towards their life issues 2. To encourage female smokers to stop using tobacco 3. To assess the effectiveness of mindfulness approach for smoking cessation in women We will use cluster randomisation. About 40 companies (5 smokers / company) involved in the study will be matched on the company characteristics (e.g. company size, the industry the company belongs to). Using random generator in Excel, random number will be first generated to each pair i.e. there will be 1-40 random numbers. For each pair, the two companies will be randomly assigned to 0 or 1. Companies who are assigned to 1 will be allocated to intervention . Interviewers (assessors) in the follow-ups will not be involved in the randomization process and be totally blinded to the group assignment (allocation concealment). Invitation letter will be sent to beauty and retail industries or other women-related industries by Lok Sin Tong. Health talks on smoking and its hazard will deliver to each company. For those who join the workshops after the health talks will fill in pre- and post- workshop questionnaires (Appendix 4-5). Women who attend the health talk will be recruited on site. Women will be screened by the criteria of eligibility form (Appendix 1) and all eligible women smokers will be asked to sign on informed consents (Appendix 2, 3) before they participate in the programs. After they consent to participate, they will fill in a baseline questionnaire (Appendix 6), and will be assigned to intervention or control group according to the allocation of their company. Some of the eligible women may miss the health talks and directly join the intervention program, because of this situation the intervention group will be further divided into Group A and B: women in Group A will attend health talks and intervention program, women in Group B will only attend intervention program. Intervention group (Mindfulness Smoking cessation program): Women in intervention group will be provided 2 sessions mindfulness training within 2 weeks. Each session will last for 2 hours with 8-20 participants. For mindfulness training, it aims to understand women smokers' own life planning, stressors and their correlation with smoking; to help women smokers sit with negative affect and alleviate stress through mindfulness; to educate women smokers gain the self-control and replace the smoking habit; to teach women smokers how to prevent craving and relapse. The tentative agenda is shown below: Session 1 (Introductory) Contents 1. Pre-questionnaire 2. Introducing mindfulness and managing craving with mindfulness 3. Understanding the components of craving and its management - The relationship between habitual response and learned association - The physiological and psychological withdrawal symptoms 4. Mindfulness yoga practices Responsible person* Smoking Cessation Program in Workplace (SCPW) staff & Yoga teacher Session 2 (Advanced) Contents 1. Knowledge about impacts of smoking on women's health 2. Recapture the management of craving through mindfulness 3. Mindfulness exercises 4. Mindfulness yoga practices Responsible person* SCPW staff & Yoga teacher * SCPW staff would be responsible for the whole session except for the part "stress reduction and self-control through mindfulness yoga". It would be held by the yoga teacher. Control group (Self-help smoking cessation booklet): Only the self-help booklet related to quitting will be provided to the participants. Evaluation: 1-month telephone interviews will be conducted for control group at 1- (Appendix 97) and 6-month follow-ups will be conducted for both groups (after the last interventions) by trained interviewers (blinded to the group assignment). Participants who have reported abstinence in past 7 days from smoking at 6-month follow-ups will undergo a non-biochemical validation to check their quitting status. They will be invited to have biochemical validation tests (saliva cotinine test and exhaled CO test) at 6-month follow-up. In-depth face-to-face interview will be conducted by trained interviewers in 10 randomly selected participants in each group (in total 20 participants) to better understand their quitting process, quitting difficulty, and their own feeling and experience in the project.
The primary objective of this project is to evaluate the effectiveness of an enhanced intervention vs. a standard intervention to complement a comprehensive smoke-free policy, in a multi-site, privately managed affordable housing context.
Quitting smoking is a big decision, a decision to achieve better health. Trying to quit smoking can be stressful. The prospect of dealing with withdrawal symptoms, fear or failure to change the routine, can also be sources of stress. Withdrawal from nicotine is characterized by symptoms that include anxiety, irritability, hunger and cravings for more tobacco. Nicotine creates a dependency so that the body develops a need for a certain level of nicotine at all times. Unless that level is maintained symptoms of withdrawal appear. For tobacco users trying to quit, symptoms of withdrawal from nicotine are unpleasant and stressful, but they are temporary. Research has demonstrated the relative effectiveness of pharmacotherapy treatments in smoking cessation but no studies have examined the effects of the probiotics on the withdrawal symptoms associated with the tobacco cessation during nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness of two probiotic products during NRT for managing withdrawal symptoms associated with smoking cessation.
Background About half of the daily smokers in Hong Kong have never tried and have no intention to quit smoking. 37.9% of daily smokers attempted to quit but failed. Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) is a safe and effective pharmacotherapy to reduce withdrawal symptoms during early stage of tobacco abstinence and increase quit rate. However, the prevalence of using NRT in Hong Kong is lower than most of the developed countries. The proposed project aims to test if providing free NRT sampling to smokers can increase quit attempt and hence quit successfully. Methods Nurses and university undergraduate students will be trained, and will invite smokers at outdoor public places to participate in the randomized controlled trial, which randomized eligible smokers to intervention or control group. The intervention group will be provided with 1-week free NRT sampling and medication counselling, whereas the control group will only be advised to purchase NRT on their own. The primary outcome is the proportion of any self-reported quit attempt (no smoking for at least 24 hours) in the past month at 1- and 3-month telephone follow-up. Discussions The findings will inform the feasibility and effectiveness of delivering free NRT sampling to increase quit attempt and abstinence. It will yield more information on smokers' adherence to the NRT sampling, side effect and safety issue of the usage. Moreover, it will guide a future larger trial to test the effect from the NRT sampling and translation to practice.