Cobb Nathan K, Graham Amanda L, Byron M Justin, Niaura Raymond S, Abrams David B
Schroeder Institute for Tobacco Research and Policy Studies, American Legacy Foundation, Washington, DC 20036, USA.
J Med Internet Res. 2011 Dec 19;13(4):e119. doi: 10.2196/jmir.1911.
Smoking remains one of the most pressing public health problems in the United States and internationally. The concurrent evolution of the Internet, social network science, and online communities offers a potential target for high-yield interventions capable of shifting population-level smoking rates and substantially improving public health.
Our objective was to convene leading practitioners in relevant disciplines to develop the core of a strategic research agenda on online social networks and their use for smoking cessation, with implications for other health behaviors.
We conducted a 100-person, 2-day, multidisciplinary workshop in Washington, DC, USA. Participants worked in small groups to formulate research questions that could move the field forward. Discussions and resulting questions were synthesized by the workshop planning committee.
We considered 34 questions in four categories (advancing theory, understanding fundamental mechanisms, intervention approaches, and evaluation) to be the most pressing.
Online social networks might facilitate smoking cessation in several ways. Identifying new theories, translating these into functional interventions, and evaluating the results will require a concerted transdisciplinary effort. This report presents a series of research questions to assist researchers, developers, and funders in the process of efficiently moving this field forward.
在美国及国际上,吸烟仍然是最紧迫的公共卫生问题之一。互联网、社会网络科学和在线社区的同步发展为能够改变人群吸烟率并大幅改善公众健康的高效干预措施提供了一个潜在目标。
我们的目标是召集相关学科的主要从业者,制定一项关于在线社交网络及其用于戒烟的战略研究议程的核心内容,并探讨其对其他健康行为的影响。
我们在美国华盛顿特区举办了为期两天、有100人参加的多学科研讨会。参与者分成小组,提出能够推动该领域发展的研究问题。研讨会规划委员会对讨论内容和由此产生的问题进行了综合整理。
我们认为四类(推进理论、理解基本机制、干预方法和评估)中的34个问题最为紧迫。
在线社交网络可能通过多种方式促进戒烟。识别新理论、将其转化为有效的干预措施并评估结果需要跨学科的协同努力。本报告提出了一系列研究问题,以协助研究人员、开发者和资助者在有效推动该领域发展的过程中发挥作用。