- ICH GCP
- Registro degli studi clinici negli Stati Uniti
- Sperimentazione clinica NCT02354872
Motivation Project: Testing Intervention Components for the Smoker Who is Unwilling to Quit
17 settembre 2020 aggiornato da: University of Wisconsin, Madison
Optimized Chronic Care for Smokers: A Comparative Effectiveness Approach; Motivation Project: Testing Intervention Components for the Smoker Who is Unwilling to Quit
The ultimate goal of this research is to develop a chronic care treatment package for smokers that will address the challenges and opportunities of each phase of the cessation process - motivation, preparation, cessation, maintenance, and relapse recovery.
That is, to develop treatments for smokers not yet ready to quit, those who are preparing to quit, those actively engaged in the quitting process and those who have tried to quit but relapsed.
To achieve this goal, this research comprises three distinct research studies, each of which represent a phase in a comprehensive chronic care treatment model for clinical intervention with smokers in the primary care setting: the Motivation Study, the Cessation Study, and the Long-term Quitting Study.
The goal of each study is to test and identify effective intervention components for distinct phases of the smoking cessation process.
These components will then be combined for future research on the effectiveness of this chronic care treatment package.
This study is a 2x2x2x2 factorial design.
Participants will be randomized to one of two levels on four different factors: 1) Nicotine Mini-Lozenge vs.
No Mini-Lozenge, 2) Behavioral Reduction Counseling (intervention: BR) vs.
No Behavioral Reduction Counseling, 3) 5Rs Motivation Counseling (intervention 5 R's) vs.
No 5Rs Motivation Counseling, and 4) Behavioral Activation Counseling (intervention BA) vs.
No Behavioral Activation Counseling.
These components have strong theoretical and empirical support, but their relative, additive, and interactive effects are unknown.
Panoramica dello studio
Stato
Completato
Condizioni
Tipo di studio
Interventistico
Iscrizione (Effettivo)
577
Fase
- Fase 4
Contatti e Sedi
Questa sezione fornisce i recapiti di coloro che conducono lo studio e informazioni su dove viene condotto lo studio.
Luoghi di studio
-
-
Wisconsin
-
Madison, Wisconsin, Stati Uniti, 53711-2027
- University of Wisconsin Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, School of Medicine and Public Health
-
-
Criteri di partecipazione
I ricercatori cercano persone che corrispondano a una certa descrizione, chiamata criteri di ammissibilità. Alcuni esempi di questi criteri sono le condizioni generali di salute di una persona o trattamenti precedenti.
Criteri di ammissibilità
Età idonea allo studio
18 anni e precedenti (Adulto, Adulto più anziano)
Accetta volontari sani
No
Sessi ammissibili allo studio
Tutto
Descrizione
Inclusion Criteria:
- age >=18 years; smoking >4 cigarettes/day for the previous 6 months; able to read, write, and speak English; have reliable phone access and agree to respond to Interactive Voice Response (IVR) phone prompts; and if currently using NRT, agreeing to use only study medication for the duration of the study. We will not exclude participants based on their prior use of cessation medication or if they use multiple tobacco products in order to enhance real-world generalization (these will be statistically controlled in analyses); not currently attempting to quit smoking; not intending to quit smoking (defined as no plans to quit in the next month); and planning to remain in the intervention catchment area for at least 12 months.
Exclusion Criteria:
- currently taking bupropion or varenicline; medical contraindications to using NRT including hospitalized (for at least one night) for a stroke, heart attack, congestive heart failure or diabetes in the last 30 days; diagnosis of or treatment for schizophrenia, a psychotic disorder or bipolar disorder in the last 10 years; and, if the participant is a woman of childbearing potential, being pregnant or intending to becoming pregnant or unwillingness to use an approved method of birth control during treatment.
Piano di studio
Questa sezione fornisce i dettagli del piano di studio, compreso il modo in cui lo studio è progettato e ciò che lo studio sta misurando.
Come è strutturato lo studio?
Dettagli di progettazione
- Scopo principale: Trattamento
- Assegnazione: Randomizzato
- Modello interventistico: Assegnazione fattoriale
- Mascheramento: Nessuno (etichetta aperta)
Armi e interventi
Gruppo di partecipanti / Arm |
Intervento / Trattamento |
|---|---|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, BA
1; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, No BA
2; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, No BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, BA
3; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, No BA
4; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, No BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, BA
5; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, No BA
6; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, No BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, BA
7; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, No BA
8; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, No BA
|
If randomized to only the Nicotine Mini-Lozenge condition: Participants randomized to this condition will receive up to a 12 month supply of 2 mg or 4 mg nicotine mini-lozenges.
Mini-Lozenges will be given at the initial visit and over the course of the whole study.
Participants will be instructed to use 9 pieces daily for the 12 months.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, BA
9; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, BA
|
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, No BA
10; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, BR, 5Rs, No BA
|
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, BA
11; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, BA
|
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, No BA
12; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, BR, No 5Rs, No BA
|
We will deliver BR in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period, with an in-person session at Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
Sessions are front-loaded to enhance acquisition of new behaviors.
BR Counseling will emphasize the development of smoking control skills via feasible, specific, and graded assignments of smoking reduction activities that will be tracked over time.
BR will also emphasize competence and self-efficacy, both which will be directly linked to the practice of smoking reduction skills and success in smoking control.
The health counselor will provide rationales for the reduction intervention, why reduction (e.g., eliminating smoking contexts) should help the smoker, and provide the participant with specific exercises and goals.
The health counselor will explicitly address pragmatic issues such as work contexts, smoking policies, and habits that interfere with smoking reduction efforts.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, BA
13; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, BA
|
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, No BA
14; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, 5Rs, No BA
|
The 5Rs Motivation Counseling will be delivered in four (10-15 min) sessions over a 52-week period.
Participants in the "on" condition will receive three brief phone sessions over the year to prompt processing of motives for smoking reduction or cessation.
The health counselor and smoker will discuss: 1) Relevance of smoking to the individual; 2) Risks of continued heavy smoking; 3) Rewards of quitting and significant reduction; and 4) Roadblocks to success; and will do so on a 5) Repeated basis.
The discussion will follow the general principles of MI: counselors will use strategies that are nonauthoritarian, nonconfrontational, supportive, and use open-ended questions.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, BA
15; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, BA
|
The BA treatment will be delivered in 10 (10-15 minute) sessions over a 52-week period starting with Visit 1 followed by nine phone counseling sessions.
This BA treatment will be modeled after Behavioral Activation for quitting smoking, but made relevant for smoking reduction.
Treatment goals focus on helping participants engage in positively reinforcing activities while not smoking.
The treatment includes: 1) a rationale for the BA exercises as they relate to smoking (e.g., engaging in non-smoking reinforcers will provide other sources of pleasure and assist with cutting down); 2) assessment of the participant's goals, values, and reinforcing value of current nonsmoking activities; 3) training in self-monitoring using an activity log; 4) ongoing assignments of activities that should significantly increase the participant's nonsmoking reinforcement and create broader lifestyle and cue exposure changes; and 5) problem-solving to address obstacles to goal attainment.
|
|
Sperimentale: No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, No BA
16; This arm of the project will address the following question: How effective is the following intervention?
No Mini-Lozenge, No BR, No 5Rs, No BA
|
Nessun trattamento
|
Cosa sta misurando lo studio?
Misure di risultato primarie
Misura del risultato |
Misura Descrizione |
Lasso di tempo |
|---|---|---|
|
7-Day Point-Prevalence Abstinence
Lasso di tempo: 12 months
|
Participants who self-report no smoking for the past 7 days at the assessment endpoint (12 month follow-up) will be considered to meet criteria for 7-Day Point-Prevalence Abstinence.
Participants who who report any smoking in the past 7 days (at the 12 month follow-up) will be considered to be relapsed (smoking).
|
12 months
|
Collaboratori e investigatori
Qui è dove troverai le persone e le organizzazioni coinvolte in questo studio.
Sponsor
Collaboratori
Investigatori
- Cattedra di studio: Michael C Fiore, MD, MPH, MBA, University of Wisconsin Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, School of Medicine and Public Health
- Direttore dello studio: Jessica Cook, PhD, University of Wisconsin Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, School of Medicine and Public Health
- Investigatore principale: Robin Mermelstein, PhD, Institute for Health Research and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago
Pubblicazioni e link utili
La persona responsabile dell'inserimento delle informazioni sullo studio fornisce volontariamente queste pubblicazioni. Questi possono riguardare qualsiasi cosa relativa allo studio.
Studiare le date dei record
Queste date tengono traccia dell'avanzamento della registrazione dello studio e dell'invio dei risultati di sintesi a ClinicalTrials.gov. I record degli studi e i risultati riportati vengono esaminati dalla National Library of Medicine (NLM) per assicurarsi che soddisfino specifici standard di controllo della qualità prima di essere pubblicati sul sito Web pubblico.
Studia le date principali
Inizio studio (Effettivo)
1 gennaio 2015
Completamento primario (Effettivo)
19 marzo 2019
Completamento dello studio (Effettivo)
19 marzo 2019
Date di iscrizione allo studio
Primo inviato
22 gennaio 2015
Primo inviato che soddisfa i criteri di controllo qualità
29 gennaio 2015
Primo Inserito (Stima)
3 febbraio 2015
Aggiornamenti dei record di studio
Ultimo aggiornamento pubblicato (Effettivo)
22 settembre 2020
Ultimo aggiornamento inviato che soddisfa i criteri QC
17 settembre 2020
Ultimo verificato
1 settembre 2020
Maggiori informazioni
Termini relativi a questo studio
Parole chiave
Termini MeSH pertinenti aggiuntivi
Altri numeri di identificazione dello studio
- 2014-1041Motivation
- A534252 (Altro identificatore: UW Madison)
- CTRI (Altro identificatore: UW Madison)
- SMPH\MEDICINE\TOBACCO RE (Altro identificatore: UW Madison)
- 1P01CA180945-01 (Sovvenzione/contratto NIH degli Stati Uniti)
Informazioni su farmaci e dispositivi, documenti di studio
Studia un prodotto farmaceutico regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti
No
Studia un dispositivo regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti
No
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Prove cliniche su Nessun trattamento
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University of Illinois at ChicagoNational Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD); Sinai Urban...Non ancora reclutamento
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RadiancyCompletatoLombalgia cronica da lieve a moderataIsraele
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Reistone Biopharma Company LimitedCompletato
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Hill-RomCompletato
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Ohio State UniversityCompletatoGenitorialità | Disturbi mentali nell'adolescenza | Adolescente - Problema emotivoStati Uniti
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University of MinnesotaNational Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)Completato
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China Academy of Chinese Medical SciencesReclutamentoAsma bronchialeCina
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Nanjing University of Traditional Chinese MedicineSconosciuto
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Medical University of South CarolinaNational Institutes of Health (NIH)Iscrizione su invitoFumare | Smettere di fumare | Disturbo da uso di tabacco | HIV | AIDS | FarmaciaStati Uniti
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National Institute on Aging (NIA)SconosciutoDemenza | Problemi di comportamentoStati Uniti