Smoking Cessation Clinical Trial
— ParejasOfficial title:
En Pareja: A Latino Couples Intervention to Help Expectant Fathers Quit Smoking
Verified date | June 2013 |
Source | Duke University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
Smoking among Latino males living in the U.S. is a significant public health problem, one
that can contribute to disparities in life expectancy and increase mortality. Latinos smoke
at the same rate as White males but are less likely than Whites to quit. Interventions do
not reach Latino smokers because many speak only Spanish and previous interventions have had
notable limitations. First, most have recruited volunteers, so hard-to-reach Latino smokers
likely did not participate. Second, cessation effects were short-term only. Third, no
program has attempted to boost Latino cessation rates by capitalizing on a "teachable
moment", a time when quitting may seem especially relevant. To address these deficits, we
propose to conduct a teachable moment intervention trial for Latino smokers. We will attempt
to capitalize on the potential teachable moment of Latinas' pregnancy as an impetus for
Latinos' cessation. We will include couples, rather than just men, to sustain intervention
effects. We will partner with community leaders to develop an intervention based primarily
on Social Cognitive Theory, the Teachable Moment Model, and the Cognitive-Behavioral Couple
Therapy Model. Some elements will be at the individual level to help Latinos quit smoking
and others will be couple-based to improve communication and reduce stress in the postpartum
relationship. The program will be culturally sensitive to Latino values, such as familismo,
valuing of and duty to the family and personalismo, valuing warm personal relationships. We
will recruit Latino couples (n=366) into a Guia (control) arm in which men receive a
culturally appropriate smoking cessation guide, and a couple-based smoking cessation
counseling arm.
Hypothesis 1: Latino expectant fathers who receive couple-based counseling to quit smoking
will be more likely to be abstinent from smoking at 28 weeks in pregnancy and 12 months
post-randomization than Latino expectant fathers who receive a self-help smoking cessation
guide.
Hypothesis 2: Couple-based counseling will improve mediators, such as couple communication
about smoking, self-efficacy, outcome expectancies, stress levels, risk perceptions,
emotion, and self-image, which in turn, will increase cessation rates among Latino expectant
fathers.
Hypothesis 3: Couples in the counseling arm will have a greater increase in cessation during
pregnancy and a lower decrease in cessation at 6 and 12 months post-randomization than
couples in the Guia arm.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 705 |
Est. completion date | April 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | September 2012 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 16 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Female: 18 or older (or 16 years or older if legally married), not smoking, married or living with a partner who smokes, and less than 25 weeks pregnant (to allow enough time to intervene during pregnancy). - Male: 18 or older (or 16 years or greater if legally married, living with the woman, smoked in past 30 days, and plans to live in the area for at least two years. Exclusion Criteria: - Female: currently smoking. |
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Duke University Medical Center | Durham | North Carolina |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Duke University | National Cancer Institute (NCI) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | seven-day point prevalence smoking abstinence | 28 weeks gestation and 12 months post-randomization | No | |
Secondary | continued abstinence (no smoking at all in between and including all follow-ups) | 28 weeks gestation, 6 and 12 months post-randomization | No | |
Secondary | prolonged abstinence (continued abstinence after two week grace period with failures counting as smoking seven days in a row or one day in two consecutive weeks) | 28 weeks gestation, 6 and 12 months post-randomization | No |
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