View clinical trials related to Smoking Cessation.
Filter by:Adults with serious mental illness (SMI) represent 5% of the United States population, yet account for 30% of all cigarettes smoked and are 2 to 3 times more likely to be dependent on nicotine compared with the general population. There are also significant disparities in quitting: 24% of lifetime smokers with SMI report not smoking within the past year compared with 52% of lifetime smokers without SMI. Two barriers partly explain the large disparity in smoking cessation rates between adults with and without SMI. First, there is a lack of high-quality, evidence-based interventions for smoking cessation in populations with SMI, which may be because adults with SMI are often excluded from clinical trials, despite evidence indicating that SMI is highly comorbid with smoking. Second, clinicians and staff within mental health settings generally do not have the resources or appropriate training to provide smoking cessation treatments to patients with SMI. Smartphone-based mobile health applications for smoking cessation could significantly improve cessation rates for adults with SMI. However, smoking cessation apps are underutilized by smokers with SMI partly because the apps are not designed for their unique needs. This study aims to conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial to evaluate the feasibility of an innovative, evidence-based smoking cessation app tailored for smokers with SMI. Seventy-five treatment-seeking smokers with SMI who will be referred from the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (25 per group), a publicly funded outpatient psychiatry treatment program, will be randomly assigned to receive either (1) QuitGuide, a free smoking cessation app developed by the National Cancer Institute, (2) a smoking cessation app that tracks and automatically intervenes upon psychological distress during a quit attempt and delivers real-time intervention messages tailored to the current level of lapse risk and current lapse triggers (Smart-T Mental Health; STMH), or (3) the STMH app with additional messaging focused on increasing adherence to nicotine replacement medications (STMH+). All study conditions will be followed for 5 weeks (1-week pre-cessation and 4 weeks post-cessation), receive nicotine replacement therapy, and complete smartphone-based survey assessments using ecological momentary assessment procedures.
The purpose of the proposed project is to evaluate an automated mobile phone-based CM approach that will allow socioeconomically disadvantaged individuals to remotely benefit from financial incentives for smoking cessation. The investigators have previously combined technologies including 1) portable carbon monoxide monitors that connect with mobile phones to remotely verify smoking abstinence, 2) facial recognition software to confirm participant identity during breath sample submissions, and 3) remote delivery of incentives automatically triggered by biochemical confirmation of self-reported abstinence. This automated CM approach will be evaluated in a randomized controlled trial that includes 532 socioeconomically disadvantaged males and females seeking smoking cessation treatment. Participants will be randomly assigned to either telephone counseling and nicotine replacement therapy (standard care [SC]) or SC plus a mobile financial incentives intervention (CM) for biochemically-confirmed abstinence. Participants will be followed for 26 weeks after a scheduled quit attempt. Biochemically-verified 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 26 weeks post-quit will be the primary outcome variable. Cost-effectiveness will be evaluated to inform policy-related decisions. Potential mobile CM treatment mechanisms, including self-efficacy, motivation, and treatment engagement, will be explored to optimize future versions of the intervention.
This open-label study will evaluate EMB-001, comprised of metyrapone, a cortisol synthesis inhibitor marketed as a diagnostic drug for testing hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function, combined with oxazepam, an anxiolytic and sedative/hypnotic benzodiazepine, to help smokers abstain from smoking during a 12-week trial period.
The focus of this proposal is on expanding access to voluntary smoke-free homes to formerly homeless residents residing in permanent supportive housing, and examining the impact of this intervention on reducing tobacco-caused disparities. In this study, the principal investigator will conduct a multi-site, community-based cluster-randomized wait-list controlled trial of the multi-faceted smoke-free home intervention among 400 permanent supportive housing residents residing in 20 permanent supportive housing sites across the San Francisco Bay Area with the goal of increasing voluntary adoption of smoke-free homes.
Aims: To identify the predictors associated with smoking cessation in smokers under treatment for alcohol and/or cannabis treated in drug treatment centers (DTC). Methodology: Mixed methods project with qualitative and quantitative designs (three studies). Study I discussion groups: of clinical professionals of DTC to explore the barriers/facilitators of these smokers in quitting and the interventions carried out. Study II Prospective cohort of smokers in alcohol and/or cannabis treatment that will be followed-up for 12 months. Sample size: difference in incidence (exposed to cessation interventions versus non-exposed = 12 per 100 years), α = 0.05, β = 0.10, losses = 20% (n = 726). Dependent variables: self-reported and verified tobacco consumption abstinence, quit attempts, motivation, and self-efficacy. Independent variables: age, sex, the substance under treatment. Analysis: incidence, relative risk and simple and multiple logistic regression models (odds ratio and confidence interval, CI, 95%) of quitting. Study III discussion groups: with smokers under alcohol and/or cannabis treatment selected according to their typology. Analysis: of thematic content and triangulation qualitative and quantitative results. Expected results: Characterization of variables that influence tobacco cessation, to improve the design of interventions.
This is a proposal to conduct a pilot study to assess the feasibility of recruitment of Veteran smoker and support person (SP) dyads and study procedures in preparation for a large randomized pragmatic trial.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of delivering a personalized, just-in-time adaptive intervention driven by machine learning prediction of smoking lapse risk in real time.
To compare the effectiveness of four interventions to promote sustained, biochemically confirmed smoking abstinence for 6 months among underserved smokers referred for lung cancer screening at four large U.S. health systems.
The investigators aim to address the following specific aims: - Determine the efficacy of Prog in preventing postpartum smoking relapse and reducing smoking relapse risk factors. - Examine the effects of this maternal smoking intervention on infant health. - Examine racial and ethnic differences in intervention outcomes.
This project formally test an individual, telephone-based version of the All Nations Breath of Life smoking cessation program (tANBL) for American Indians (AI) for efficacy versus an untailored comparison program (CP). The primary outcome is 7-day point prevalence abstinence from smoking cigarettes at 6 months post-baseline. Secondarily, the study examines continuous abstinence and reduction in smoking at both 6 and 12 months post-baseline, as well as demographic predictors of cessation and/or reduction.