Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT04340102

Development of a Scalable Intervention to Improve Smoking Cessation in Persons With Serious Mental Illness

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Maryland, Baltimore · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

All patients with serious mental illness are abstinent while in the hospital for a psychiatric admission yet almost all return to smoking after discharge. The investigators propose to adapt a digital intervention both to the needs of SMI smokers and to being introduced in the inpatient psychiatric setting through a collaboration between experts in SMI and the Truth Initiative, a pre-eminent tobacco control organization. The investigators believe this will bridge the inpatient to outpatient gap in cessation services and will help people remain abstinent following hospital discharge.

Detailed description

Persons with serious mental illness (SMI, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, recurrent depression) are a socioeconomically disadvantaged group and die on average 10-15 years earlier than those in the general population, many from cancer. The prevalence of smoking in persons with SMI is approximately 3 times that in the general population; smoking is the is the strongest risk factor for elevated mortality in this population. Psychiatric inpatient admissions are common in SMI and the hospital is an optimal place to provide smoking cessation services. All patients are abstinent while in the hospital. The key challenge is how to continue to engage these patients in cessation services to support continued abstinence. While most receive refer to telephone quitline at discharge, quitlines are not as effective with SMI smokers and almost all return to smoking. Introducing hospitalized SMI patients to cessation services that can be easily accessed when they leave the hospital offers the best chance of converting initial abstinence into sustained abstinence post-discharge. A digital intervention that incorporates web-delivered evidence-based smoking cessation practices, digital coaching, and mobile text messaging is a scalable and sustainable way to bridge the inpatient to outpatient gap in cessation services. Currently there is no digital cessation program that addresses the needs of SMI smokers. The investigators propose to adapt a digital intervention both to the needs of SMI smokers and to being introduced in the inpatient psychiatric setting through a collaboration between experts in SMI and the Truth Initiative, a pre-eminent tobacco control organization. The investigators will build upon a well-established, evidence-based, cessation website, BecomeAnEX.org (EX), that offers individualized quit plans, an active social community, text and email messaging support, and digital coaching. Integrating input from different stakeholders, the investigators will develop adaptations so that EX components and language are in line with principles of mental health recovery and will successfully engage SMI smokers with digital coaching that will support use of other EX services. The investigators will develop automated and integrated procedures for identifying hospitalized SMI smokers and registering them with EX. The investigators will then examine the feasibility and acceptability of the adapted intervention to engage and retain 60 smokers with SMI after hospital discharge.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBecomeAnExThis research study is focused on a smoking cessation program called BecomeAnEx. We are studying how to adapt BecomeAnEx for people with a mental health disorder who want to reduce or quit their tobacco smoking. BecomeAnEx includes a website that provides education about smoking and quitting. It also has a text messaging program that delivers personalized information. Persons in the program have access to real-time digital coaching with a remote coach who has experience helping people quit smoking. In addition, the program has an on-line community of current and former smokers that can provide support and encouragement.

Timeline

Start date
2020-07-01
Primary completion
2022-06-01
Completion
2022-06-01
First posted
2020-04-09
Last updated
2020-11-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04340102. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.