Smoking Clinical Trial
Official title:
Protecting the 'Hood Against Tobacco: Cessation Project
Among all racial/ethnic groups, African Americans have the greatest risk of becoming ill or
dying from tobacco-related diseases. Because of this disproportionate disease burden, it is
particularly urgent that researchers focusing on tobacco control partner with African
American communities. Intervention strategies which hold the tobacco industry accountable
for its behavior are effective in changing views of tobacco use. In earlier work, the
investigators found that information from internal tobacco industry documents, when shown to
African American smokers, stimulated reflection about quitting and interest in disseminating
information about industry targeting behaviors to others. However, to date there have been
no attempts to utilize the information in industry documents as part of a smoking cessation
intervention. In this project, the investigators will test whether a community co-developed,
tailored quit-smoking program featuring exposures to African American-specific tobacco
industry documents and media exercises in addition to proven individual quitting strategies
can increase the number of people who quit smoking at six months and one year, as compared
with usual care.
The specific aims of the project are to:
1. test, using statistics, how well an innovative community-based, culturally tailored
quit-smoking program for African Americans works at 6 and 12 months;
2. test selected variables for how well they predict who will return to smoking;
3. use interviews to identify additional individual and/or community factors associated
with successful quitting or relapse; and
4. collect information to evaluate the overall effectiveness of the CARA project
collaborative efforts in developing and sustaining the project over time, enhancing
community awareness of tobacco issues, and creation or enhancement of community tobacco
control resources.
Among all racial/ethnic groups, African Americans have the greatest risk of becoming ill or
dying from tobacco-related diseases. Because of this disproportionate disease burden, it is
particularly urgent that researchers focusing on tobacco control partner with African
American communities. Intervention strategies which hold the tobacco industry accountable
for its behavior are effective in changing views of tobacco use. In earlier work, we found
that information from internal tobacco industry documents, when shown to African American
smokers, stimulated reflection about quitting and interest in disseminating information
about industry targeting behaviors to others. However, to date there have been no attempts
to utilize the information in industry documents as part of a smoking cessation
intervention. In this project, we will test whether a community co-developed, tailored
quit-smoking program featuring exposures to African American-specific tobacco industry
documents and media exercises in addition to proven individual quitting strategies can
increase the number of people who quit smoking at six months and one year, as compared with
usual care.
The specific aims of the project are to:
1. test, using statistics, how well an innovative community-based, culturally tailored
quit-smoking program for African Americans works at 6 and 12 months;
2. test selected variables for how well they predict who will return to smoking;
3. use interviews to identify additional individual and/or community factors associated
with successful quitting or relapse; and
4. collect information to evaluate the overall effectiveness of the CARA project
collaborative efforts in developing and sustaining the project over time, enhancing
community awareness of tobacco issues, and creation or enhancement of community tobacco
control resources.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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