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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04223336
Other study ID # 119-2018
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date November 30, 2019
Est. completion date May 2, 2021

Study information

Verified date August 2021
Source Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Compared to non-smokers, smokers are significantly more likely to also engage in other chronic disease-related risk behaviours; which can be a barrier to quitting successfully. Therefore a holistic approach is needed for smoking cessation treatment. The Smoking Treatment for Ontario Patients (STOP) program currently offers an online integrated care pathway (ICP) for addressing alcohol and mood as a part of smoking cessation treatment. Evidence also shows that smokers are also more likely to be physical inactive and not consume enough fruits/vegetables. These risk behaviours can further compound the negative health effects for smokers. However, it is remains unclear which and how many behaviours should be addressed simultaneously in smoking cessation treatment and what the impact on smoking cessation and care for STOP participants will be. Through this study, the investigators will seek to: 1. Determine whether the addition of an integrated care pathway for physical activity and fruits/vegetable consumption to the STOP program is associated with participants' quit prevalence at 6 month follow-up among STOP participants who are physically inactive and/or have low levels of fruits/vegetable consumption. 2. Understand how the integrated care pathway for physical activity and fruits/vegetable consumption is implemented in primary care settings. In the process, we hope to generate insights on how this ICP can be most helpful to organizations, staff and patients.


Description:

Tobacco use, in particular, continues to be the leading cause of preventable death, with a recent review identifying strong associations between tobacco and other modifiable risk behaviours. Tobacco users tend to consume more alcohol, eat less fruits and vegetables and report less minutes of leisure physical activity as compared with non-tobacco users. The clustering of these modifiable risk behaviours among tobacco users not only translates a heightened risk for cardiovascular disease but may also negatively influence the likelihood of successful smoking cessation. Alcohol consumed even in small amounts, has been shown to increase cravings for smoking, thus increasing risk of relapse to smoking. Increasing physical activity levels can help to reduce tobacco withdrawal and cravings, as well as minimize the reward anticipation. Individuals also often misattribute the reversal of withdrawal symptoms (i.e. irritability) from smoking as relief from stress. This can also increase the risk of relapse when attempting to quit. In addition to the more direct relationships between these health behaviours and smoking cessation, successfully changing one or more behaviours may also help to increase self-efficacy and self-confidence to change other health behaviours that individuals may be less motivated to act on. As a result, targeting multiple risk behaviours in smokers may help maximize health promotion efforts by augmenting smoking abstinence rates, improving overall health, and reducing healthcare-related costs. In order to address this, the Smoking Treatment for Ontario Patients (STOP) Program (REB#: 058-2011), a province-wide initiative that uses the existing healthcare infrastructure to provide smoking cessation support to smokers in Ontario, has been developed and is currently testing a web-enabled Integrated Care Pathways (ICP) for some of these behaviours. In 2016, the STOP program started offering specialized clinical pathways through the STOP Portal (a web-based platform and an online data collection/management tool used by the STOP practitioners to complete participant enrollment and record smoking status at each visit) for smokers who drink above Canadian Cancer Society guidelines (REB# 035-2015). In 2018, it added a specialized ICP for those who have mood disorders (REB#: 065-2016). However, there are currently no web-enabled tools in the STOP program that also address some of the other well-known modifiable risk factors such as: physical activity, and diet. There is substantial high quality evidence that shows the effectiveness of screening for these behaviors, providing a brief intervention, and referral to treatment when needed for helping patients quit smoking as well as change other behaviours. Moreover, a recent systematic review of behaviour change techniques practitioners can use to promote health behaviour change in patients found that, relative to other techniques, 'risk communication' and 'self-monitoring of behaviour' are the most effective techniques. As a result, we designed the intervention - an integrated care pathway that facilitates practitioners to deliver a brief intervention that includes risk communication, and provides tools for patients to monitor their health behaviours to STOP patients who have at least one of the following other modifiable risk factors at baseline: low levels of physical activity, and low levels of fruits/vegetable consumption. Low levels of physical activity will be defined as being below the Canadian national guidelines: less than 150 min per week of moderate-to-vigorous activity. Low fruits and vegetable is defined as being below the 2007 Canada's Food Guide: less than 7 servings (female) or 8 servings (male) of fruits/vegetable per day. The specific components of the intervention are outlined below: 1. Systematic screening through the STOP portal for STOP participants with at least one of the following risk factors: low levels of physical activity, and low fruits/vegetable consumption. 2. Have computer prompts that advise the practitioner of patient's risk factors, and to provide a brief intervention that includes how the identified risk factors affect the patient's ability to quit successfully (Risk communication). 3. Provision of self-monitoring tool(s) for monitoring physical activity and/or fruits/vegetable consumption levels. This study aims to assess whether the addition of an ICP for physical activity and diet into Family Health Teams (FHTs), Community Health Centres (CHCs), and Nurse Practitioner-led Clinics (NPLCs) participating in the STOP program is associated with participants' quit rate at 6 month follow-up. Individuals enrolling into the STOP program through one of these organizations will be randomly allocated (1:1) to control vs intervention group. In addition, we hope to gather insights on how this ICP can be most helpful to organizations, staff and patients, thereby informing implementation processes in other primary care settings across Canada/ Ontario. Our evaluation includes patient, clinician, and organization-level outcomes. To organize this multifaceted evaluation, we use the Reach, Efficacy, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 5331
Est. completion date May 2, 2021
Est. primary completion date May 2, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: The sample of patients for the study will be recruited from 153 Family Health Teams (FHTs), 61 Community Health Centres (CHCs) and 18 Nurse Practitioner-Led Clinics (NPLCs) currently participating in the STOP program. The inclusion criteria are as follows: - An individual enrolling in the STOP program at a participating FHT, CHC, or NPLC. - Must have at least one of the following two modifiable risk factors: low levels of physical activity and/or low levels of fruits/vegetable consumption. - Enrollment into STOP program must be completed online on the STOP Portal, in real-time with the participant present. - Must have at least one piece of contact information (e.g. phone number or email address). Exclusion Criteria: - An individual enrolling in the STOP program at a participating Addictions Agencies (AAs) - STOP enrollment conducted on paper, no contact information.

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
Brief physical activity and diet intervention
The intervention is an integrated care pathway that provides a computerized prompts for practitioners in the STOP program via their online portal. For a participant who is in the intervention group, the online portal will screen the participant for their physical activity and fruit/vegetable consumption and provide the practitioner (who is seeing this participant for their visit) with computerized alerts for physical activity and fruits/vegetable consumption. Specifically, the portal will prompt practitioners to provide a brief intervention for these two behaviours using risk communication and will also suggest brief intervention language designed based on the Elicit-Provide-Elicit framework. The portal will also have available a self-monitoring resource for physical activity and fruits/vegetable consumption and will prompt practitioners to provide this self-monitoring resource to the participant during their visit.

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Toronto Ontario

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Medical Psychiatry Alliance, Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Smoking cessation - self-report questionnaire The primary outcome of the study, measured at the patient level, is 7 day point prevalence of abstinence at 6 month follow-up. We will compare the proportion of intervention vs control group participants who report being quit at follow-up. 6-month follow-up
Secondary Physical activity - self-report questionnaire The secondary outcome, also measured at the patient level, is change in physical activity levels from baseline to 6 months follow-up. We will compare the change in physical activity from baseline to 6 month follow-up in intervention vs control group participants. 6-month follow-up
Secondary Fruits/vegetable consumption - self-report questionnaire The secondary outcome, also measured at the patient level, is change in fruits/vegetable consumption levels from baseline to 6 months follow-up. We will compare the change in fruits/vegetable consumption levels from baseline to 6 month follow-up in intervention vs control group participants. 6-month follow-up
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