Smoking Cessation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development and Application of Culturally-Appropriate Decision Aids for Smoking Cessation in Korea: a Single Arm Intervention Trial With Historical Control
Despite the establishment of various smoking cessation methods, including pharmacological
intervention, only a small proportion of smokers who visit doctors choose to receive such
assistance. Such under-utilization is especially apparent in some cultures, as in the case
of Korea, where a government survey showed that only 0.5% of current or formal smoker
reported they had been prescribed smoking cessation medication. Shame in asking for help for
an addictive disorder has been recognized as one of the most recognized cultural barrier in
Asian-American population. It is clear that culturally focused studies on smoking cessation
is warranted.
Patient decision aids are tools that help people become involved in decision making by
providing information about the options and outcomes and by clarifying personal values.
Patient decision aids have been developed to help patients decide whether to quit smoking or
not, or whether to use smoking medication or not. However, such previous studies have only
been focused on western populations.
The main purpose of this study is to develop a culturally appropriate decision aid for
smoking cessation for the Korean population, as well as evaluate its effect on their
decision to use smoking cessation medication. The investigators expect that culturally
tailored smoking cessation decision aids would increase knowledge about efficacy of smoking
cessation, make people have more positive attitudes toward smoking cessation medication,
encourage people to discuss about smoking cessation medication with their physicians.
Ultimately the investigators expect it would increase usage of smoking cessation medication
and enhance the quitting rate of smoking, which is a very important clinical issue.
Reluctance to use smoking cessation medication has been identified as most important
barriers to successful smoking cessation in the general population. While pharmacologic
intervention, especially prescription drug, is recommended by the guideline as most
effective therapy for smoking cessation, only a few smokers who visit doctors take
medication reflecting serious underutilization of the pharmacologic intervention. Although
it seems to be at least equally effective in Asian population compared with the Western
counterpart (Fagerstrom, 2010), data from Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey shows that only 0.5% of current or formal smoker reported they had been prescribed
smoking cessation medication, far less than those reported from US, UK, Australia, and
Canada.
Culture might also affect the treatment-seeking behavior related to smoking cessation. Data
from the tobacco helpline in California showed that about 40 percent of the Asian callers to
the tobacco helpline were friends or family members compared to six percent of the calls for
non-Asian (Zhu SH, 2002). This suggests that Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders may be
less likely to ask for help for themselves or that family members are more likely to ask for
help for their loved one. This implicates the need to involve family members in treatment
from the very beginning, which is a different concept than that seen in the themes of self
reliance and personal responsibility among Western cultures (Fong, 2007). In general, it is
recognized that Asian Americans with addictive disorders face several cultural and practical
barriers to treatment and the result has been an underutilization of addiction and mental
health treatment. For example, shame in asking for help for an addictive disorder is
recognized as one of the most recognized cultural barrier in this population (Fong, 2007). A
few preliminary interventions were targeted to Asian Americans (for example, Suc Khoe La
Vang for Vietnamese American and Lay-led smoking cessation approach for South East Asian
men, etc), and provided some preliminary evidence for the effectiveness of such
culturally-appropriate smoking cessation intervention (Chen, 2001).
To our knowledge, no research has focused on the cultural aspect of smoking cessation in
Korean smokers. Asian's general reluctance to use mental health services, fear of stigma of
lack of willpower, family issues might be some hypothesized examples of culture-specific
barriers to medication use, in addition to more universal barriers like lack of knowledge of
possible treatment options and their efficacy and fear of side effects. Understanding the
Korean smoker's perspectives on the way of smoking cessation might be a key to the
development of effective smoking cessation intervention in this population. However, there
is a lack of detailed research on the Korean smokers' cultural beliefs and attitudes toward
the smoking cessation, especially the use of smoking cessation medication.
Patient decision aids are tools that help people become involved in decision making by
providing information about the options and outcomes and by clarifying personal values. It
promotes shared decision making between the patient and practitioner, saves physician's
time, and reduces practice variation. In smoking cessation area, patient decision aids has
been developed to help the patients decide on whether to quit smoking or not (NHS, UK), and
on whether to use smoking cessation medication or not (Healthwire, US; Willemsen, 2006).
However, those decision aids were targeted to the Western population, thus limiting the
generalizability of the utility of such tools in the population from other culture. To our
best knowledge, there is no decision aid specifically tailored for Korean smokers, and we
would like to develop one and evaluate its effect on their decision to use smoking cessation
medication through this study.
The primary objectives of this study are: 1) to determine the effectiveness of
culturally-tailored smoking cessation decision aids by comparing the proportion of using
smoking cessation medication in Korean smokers visiting primary care clinic and health
screening center with control, and 2) to identify the factors associated with the decision
to use the smoking cessation medication, including sociodemographic, medical, behavioral and
cognitive factors, etc. The secondary objective of this study is to determine the smoking
cessation rates and use of smoking cessation medication in real world setting and identify
the factors associated with smoking cessation.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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