The purpose of this study is to test the effectiveness of a culturally-tailored Internet-based program that helps American Indian (AI) tribal college students quit smoking.
Many of the approximately 25,000 American Indian (AI) students enrolled in tribal colleges/universities in the US arrive there as smokers. A 2011 study of high school seniors reported that the smoking prevalence among AI students is approximately 40%, the highest rate among all racial and ethnic groups studied. Although prevalence data on smoking among AI college students are limited, studies have shown that the majority of smokers in high school continue to smoke once they reach college. Prohibited from marketing to adolescents and children, the tobacco industry in recent years has shifted its most intense marketing to college students, resulting in increases in smoking rates among them. The transition to college provides amble opportunities for young adults to acquire new and harmful habits. Many of these habits do not seem so alien to young AIs: Cigarette smoking is the number one cause of preventable death among AIs. Cancer is the second leading cause of death among AIs, and lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths for both AI men and women. Cultural factors, socioeconomic circumstances, and lack of culturally-tailored cessation programs for American Indian tribal college students have prevented access to effective interventions that promote smoking cessation. To date, few studies have focused on methods to encourage smoking cessation among tribal college students and no randomized clinical trials have yet been conducted. To address this public health deficit, we propose an innovative, effective, culturally and individually-tailored smoking cessation programs to promote cessation. Primary aim is to: To test the effectiveness of a culturally-tailored internet-based smoking cessation intervention (I-ANBL) compared to an internet-based heart healthy diet (I-FV:fruit/vegetable) control condition in a randomized controlled trial with Tribal College students. Our hypothesis is that American Indian tribal college students randomized to the culturally-tailored smoking cessation arm will have significantly higher 7-day point prevalence abstinence (defined as no cigarettes in the past 7 days, biochemically verified) rates at 6 months than those receiving the heart healthy diet intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
251
* Participants will be asked to log into the website prior to the first session to allow for any problems with the site to be fixed prior to sessions starting. Topics we anticipate covering include, but are not limited to: preparing to quit, dealing with cravings, support systems, traditional tobacco, stress reduction, weight management, and staying quit, along with other topics determined during program development. For each session, the tribal college student will begin the session by answering a series of questions to produce an individually-tailored report that will be provided on the screen at the end of each week's session so that the smoker can work on strategies during the week before the next internet session * Weekly procedures will follow the same format as for the first session
These sessions help American Indians learn about what they can do to prevent heart disease. We will emphasize the increase consumption of fruits and vegetables as well as addressing other heart healthy activities. Honoring the Gift of Heart Health is a user-friendly program developed especially for American Indians. The manual provides the "how-to" for leading group education sessions. It offers "hands-on" activities that help people build the skills they need to make simple, practical, and lasting changes to help them fight heart disease. The protocol will follow procedures as the I-ANBL arm, however, this fruit and vegetable arm will not include individually tailored components, but just interactive web-based materials related to increasing heart health, including certain activities.
University of Kansas Medical Center
Kansas City, Kansas, United States
Salish Kootenai College
Pablo, Montana, United States
Number of Participants With 7-day Point Prevalence Abstinence
self-reported and biochemically (salivary cotinine) verified point prevalence abstinence, defined as no smoking for the previous 7 days, at the 6-month follow-up.
Time frame: 6 months
Cigarettes Per Day
effect of intervention on the number of cigarettes smoked daily among those who continue to smoke at Month 6
Time frame: Change from Baseline in number of cigarettes smoked daily at 6 months
Number of Quit Attempts
comparison of the number of serious quit attempts between the two groups using Poisson regression
Time frame: 6 months
Number of Participants Who Participated in All Sessions Over the Course of 6 Months.
Number of participants who participated in all online sessions and study protocol procedures over the course of 6 months
Time frame: 6 months
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Regardless of the intervention arm to which subjects are assigned, they will choose the option of nicotine replacement therapy they want, as long as they are eligible for it. All participants are offered the medications, but they do not have to take any medication to participate in the study.