Smoking Cessation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Employing Episodic Future Thinking About Mating Opportunities to Induce Lower Cigarette Consumption
The current proposal aims to develop and establish the effectiveness of a novel behavioral smoking cessation intervention. Previous research has shown that having smokers engage in episodic future thinking (EFT) about specific positive life outcomes that they could experience if they quit smoking immediately can be an effective means of reducing cigarette consumption. This intervention allowed participants to generate their own general positive life outcomes. While the existing intervention approaches motivation from a generalist perspective, the current proposal seeks to modify this intervention to fit within a Fundamental Social Motives (FSM) framework. The FSM framework posits that there exist individual differences in fundamental social motives such as self-protection, disease avoidance, affiliation, kin care, and mating motives such that some individuals are more motivated to work toward some of these goals than others. Specifically, the current proposal seeks to develop an EFT intervention that appeals to fundamental mating motives by asking participants to imagine positive mating outcomes that they might experience in one year's time if they were to quit smoking immediately. This will be accomplished via two empirical studies. Study 1 will compare the effectiveness of the mating-EFT intervention to the general-EFT intervention and a yoked control condition while examining the possibility that individual differences in relationship status, mating motives, self-efficacy, and nicotine dependence moderate these effects. Study 2 will employ a quasi-experimental design to test the effectiveness of this intervention using a tailored messaging approach, assigning smokers who are either single and motivated to seek new mates or involved in a committed relationship and not motivated to seek new mates to complete the general or mating-EFT or a control task. The investigators predict that the mating-EFT will be more effective than the general EFT in reducing cigarette consumption, particularly if it is administered to participants who have more active mating goals.
Tobacco use is one of the leading causes of preventable illness and premature death
worldwide. Individuals who smoke tobacco tend to develop a physical addiction to nicotine.
Behavioral interventions have been shown to be an effective means of assisting with smoking
cessation. Smoking cessation interventions, especially those of a brief and intensive nature,
have been shown to be a cost-effective means of preventing negative health outcomes and
extending life expectancy.
The PRIME theory of motivation regards cigarette addiction as a disorder of motivation.
Accordingly, this theory seeks to help practitioners to identify effective means of
overcoming addition through an analysis of the plans, responses, motives, impulses, and
evaluations of smokers. Behavioral interventions often employ motivation interviewing with
the goal of enhancing the motivation of smokers to quit by increasing their enthusiasm for
positive life outcomes associated with quitting as well as giving a sense of purpose to this
behavioral change.
Evolutionary perspectives on human behavior suggest that the desire to find a mate is a
fundamental social motive that drives much of human behavior. Accordingly, encouraging
smokers to think about how quitting could be beneficial to their mating goals could be an
effective means of enhancing motivation to quit. A brief intervention that requires smokers
to employ episodic future thinking (EFT) has been shown to effectively reduce smoking
behavior. The current proposal aims to (1) develop and test the effectiveness of a behavioral
intervention that employs EFT about how immediate quitting of smoking could enhance prospects
for mating success and (2) refine this intervention by identifying key individual differences
that impact its effectiveness, in order to maximize successful cessation outcomes by
targeting populations that would be more strongly motivated by mating-related goals.
Aim 1: To develop and test the effectiveness of a behavioral smoking cessation intervention
that employs EFT about future mating opportunities. EFT involves thinking about oneself
experiencing a specific future event. Research indicates that this type of thinking reduces
the tendency for people to discount the future costs associated with current behaviors and to
reduce cigarette consumption. Since mating goals are of fundamental importance to human
social life, an intervention that involves EFT about how quitting smoking could lead to
increased likelihood of success in a specific future mating situation may be an especially
effective means of motivating smokers to quit. Specifically, smokers will be instructed to
imagine how quitting today could improve their chances of attracting a mate in a specific
future mating situation.
Aim 2: To determine whether individual differences in mating motives moderate the
effectiveness of the proposed intervention. People who are involved in a committed romantic
relationship are often less motivated to seek a new mate than people who are single.
Furthermore, some people are generally more motivated to seek new mates than others,
regardless of relationship status. Self-report measures are commonly used to measure
individual differences in preference for sexual variety and motivation to seek new mates. The
investigators aim to determine whether relationship status and mating motivation moderate the
effectiveness of the proposed mating-EFT smoking cessation intervention. The investigators
predict that this intervention would be most effective among individuals who are not
currently involved in a committed romantic relationship and are highly motivated to seek new
mates.
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