View clinical trials related to Tobacco Smoking.
Filter by:The investigators have developed a hybrid computer- and person-delivered intervention, called "C-Raven" for smoking cessation that is tailored to people with tobacco use in Baltimore City. The computer delivered component consists of two ~20 minute sessions on an iPad guided by Edna Poe, an interactive avatar. These sessions are followed by elective in vivo initiation of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). Community health workers (CHWs) trained in smoking cessation and motivational interviewing provide 6 weeks of supportive follow up counseling. The investigators propose a pilot of the intervention package in the Tobacco Treatment and Lung Cancer Screening Clinic (TTLCSC) at Johns Hopkins Hospital, and the Johns Hopkins Broadway Center for Addiction, assessing feasibility and acceptability of using this tool in these clinical settings. In addition, the investigators will compare whether the use of a virtual counselor is associated with greater satisfaction and engagement with the program. To this end, the investigators propose a two-arm randomized controlled trial, randomizing up to 90 individuals with tobacco use to the current CRAVEN program which includes a virtual counselor, to CRAVEN without a virtual counselor. Primary outcomes include intervention feasibility and acceptability. The investigators will secondarily examine uptake and maintenance of pharmacotherapy for tobacco cessation, readiness to quit smoking, and tobacco cessation (7 day abstinence) at 6 months, patient satisfaction by intervention arm and CHW engagement by intervention arm.
This is a randomized, controlled, multi-center, open-label, 8-cohort parallel group study to assess changes in select biomarkers of exposure (BoE) and biomarkers of potential harm (BoPH) in generally healthy smokers switching to the study investigational products (IPs), compared to subjects who continue to smoke, undergo smoking abstinence, or have never smoked.
This is a two-site, open-label, randomized, 5-way cross-over study designed to evaluate elements of abuse liability (AL) including subjective effects and physiological measures (pharmacodynamics [PD]) and plasma nicotine uptake (pharmacokinetics [PK]) during and following ad libitum use of the study investigational products (IPs) by generally healthy smokers.
This is a single-center, open-label, randomized, 2-arm, within-arm cross-over study designed to evaluate elements of abuse liability (AL) including subjective effects and physiological measures (pharmacodynamics [PD]), and plasma nicotine uptake (pharmacokinetics [PK]) during and following ad libitum use of the study investigational products (IPs) by generally healthy smokers.
Controlled laboratory experiment to examine whether Episodic Future Thinking influences loss aversion and cigarette smoking among adult individuals who currently smoke cigarettes daily.
This is a multi-site, open-label, 8-week, prospective observational study, conducted at multiple sites geographically dispersed within the U.S. The purpose of this Actual Use Study (AUS) is to investigate how U.S. adult tobacco consumers 21 to 60 years of age, inclusive, who typically smoke on average (≥5 cigarettes/day) on at least 20 out of the past 30 days will use a heated tobacco product comprising a heating device and four non-combusted cigarette variants (HTP Investigational Product [IP]) over a 6-week Actual Use Period (AUP) in their real-life/naturalistic environment and in the context of typical consumer marketing materials.
The proposed pilot project is designed to evaluate the feasibility and potential efficacy of offering small financial incentives for the completion of smoking cessation counseling and self-reported abstinence at follow-up among Oklahoma Tobacco Helpline (OTH) callers living in persistent poverty counties (PPCs). The study will enroll at least 160 adults who reside in any of the 16 persistent poverty counties in Oklahoma, who are seeking smoking cessation treatment through the OTH.
The people of the U.S. Affiliated Pacific Islands (USAPI) face higher cancer incidence, especially lung/bronchia and head-and-neck cancer, and poorer cancer outcomes, compared with the U.S. nationally. This may partly be driven by the high rates of cigarette smoking and betel (areca) nut use in the USAPI. Previous data suggest that that adolescents on Guam, as young as middle school students report markedly higher e-cigarette and tobacco product use prevalence in the USAPI compared with the USAPI nationally. Guam youths are also at risk for the use of betel nuts. Yet, currently there are no tobacco product/areca nut use prevention programs that have been developed for and tested specifically USAPI adolescents. The proposed study will develop a school-based substance use prevention curriculum for e-cigarette, tobacco product, and areca nut use prevention among Guam youths. The curriculum will use lessons incorporating innovative videos and culturally grounded activities. The study's specific aims are: 1. To develop a school-based curriculum for e-cigarette, tobacco product (i.e., cigarette, smokeless tobacco), and betel nut use prevention among middle school students in Guam. 2. Test the efficacy of the school-based curriculum in a randomized controlled trial.
To pilot test the appeal of non-tobacco oral nicotine products in cigarette smokers, smokeless tobacco users, and oral nicotine users.
The proposed project aims to develop an innovative and disseminable electronic health record (iEHR)-based approach that supports optimal primary care workflows to routinely screen families for tobacco and e-cigarette use, address household smoking behavior and promote smoke-free and e-cigarette free home and car rules in a routine and effective manner in the pediatric setting. Additionally, parents enrolled in the study will be offered assistance by a community health navigator (CHN). This study aims to examine how effective the iEHR + Navigator strategy is compared to usual care control.