This study examines the use of contingent incentives to increase attendance at smoking cessation treatment sessions by smokers with schizophrenia and other psychoses who want to quit smoking. We hypothesize that participants randomized to receive contingent rewards for group attendance will attend more treatment sessions than those in the control group.
Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders are highly prevalent in the VA population and are associated with high rates of smoking. Although smoking cessations approaches that work for non-schizophrenic patients such as behavioral counseling and medications appear to be efficacious for schizophrenic smokers, a major obstacle in providing adequate treatment is poor attendance at treatment sessions. Contingency management has been shown to shape treatment behavior in non-schizophrenic smokers and to shape other behaviors such as cocaine use and exercise in schizophrenics. The intention of this project is to examine the use of contingent incentives to increase attendance at smoking cessation treatment sessions by smokers with schizophrenia and other psychoses and to compare two different approaches to providing contingent incentives in this context. Subjects in the experimental condition draw from a fishbowl to obtain tokens when they attend a smoking cessation treatment session. The number of draws will be based upon attendance at consecutive sessions. Subjects in the experimental condition receive a set reward that will not change regardless of attendance at consecutive sessions. We hypothesize that the participants in the experimental condition will attend more smoking cessation group therapy sessions than those in the control condition because they will have the possibility, although not the likelihood, to obtain contingent reinforcement of greater value.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
23
Participants draw from a fishbowl to obtain tokens when they attend a smoking cessation treatment session. The number of draws will be based upon attendance at consecutive sessions. Tokens include messages of encouragement ("Good job!") or VA canteen vouchers of varying monetary value.
Participants receive set reward (VA canteen voucher) for each week of smoking cessation treatment they attend. The value of the reward will not change regardless of attendance at consecutive sessions.
VA Puget Sound Health Care System
Seattle, Washington, United States
Number of treatment sessions attended
Time frame: 11 weeks
Reduction in cigarettes per day
Time frame: 3 and 6 months
7- and 30-day point prevalence abstinence
Time frame: 3 and 6 months
Continuous abstinence from quit date
Time frame: 3 and 6 months
Days to relapse from quit date
Time frame: Up to 6 months
Change in BPRS scores
Time frame: 3 and 6 months
Change in PHQ-9 scores
Time frame: 3 and 6 months
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