Bennett Melanie E, Brown Clayton H, Li Lan, Himelhoch Seth, Bellack Alan, Dixon Lisa
a VA VISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center , Baltimore , Maryland , USA.
b Department of Psychiatry , University of Maryland School of Medicine , Baltimore , Maryland , USA.
J Dual Diagn. 2015;11(3-4):161-73. doi: 10.1080/15504263.2015.1104481.
Smoking among individuals with serious mental illness is a critical public health problem. Although guidelines recommend bupropion for these smokers, many do not want to use medications for smoking cessation, express ambivalence about identifying a "quit date," and do not have access to behavioral smoking cessation services integrated with mental health care.
Individuals with serious mental illness who smoked 10 or more cigarettes per day (N = 178) were randomized to either a multifaceted behavioral group intervention or a supportive group intervention, both of which were integrated within outpatient mental health services at three VA medical centers. Participants attended twice-weekly meetings for 12 weeks, provided information on their smoking at each meeting, and completed baseline and post-treatment assessments conducted by an assessor who was blind to condition. Primary outcomes collected at post-treatment included 1-week abstinence, number of cigarettes smoked per day during the last week, and number of quit attempts during the treatment period. Outcomes examined for a subset of participants who attended at least one intervention meeting (n = 152) included smoking abstinence for 1-, 2-, and 4-week blocks during the treatment period. Analyses conducted on those participants who attended three or more intervention meetings (n = 127) included time to 50% reduction in the number of cigarettes smoked and time to first quit attempt.
Sixteen participants achieved abstinence (11.8%), smoking quantity was significantly reduced (baseline M = 15.2, SD = 9.8 to post-treatment M = 7.5, SD = 7.7, p <.0001), and most reported making a quit attempt (n = 88, 72.7%). There were no differences by study condition on any abstinence or reduction outcomes. Significant reductions in number of cigarettes smoked generally took place within the first two weeks; however, these reductions did not often translate into abstinence.
Many participants reduced their smoking and sampled quitting during the study. Implementing smoking cessation services in mental health treatment settings is feasible and, if delivered in line with best practices, either a behavioral or a supportive approach can be helpful. Future research should examine ways to facilitate the transition from reduction to abstinence. This study was part of a clinical trial registered as NCT #00960375 at www.clinicaltrials.gov.
严重精神疾病患者吸烟是一个关键的公共卫生问题。尽管指南推荐安非他酮用于这些吸烟者,但许多人不想使用戒烟药物,对确定“戒烟日期”表现出矛盾心理,且无法获得与精神卫生保健相结合的行为戒烟服务。
每天吸烟10支或更多的严重精神疾病患者(N = 178)被随机分为多方面行为组干预或支持组干预,这两种干预均整合在三个退伍军人事务部医疗中心的门诊精神卫生服务中。参与者每周参加两次会议,为期12周,每次会议提供其吸烟情况信息,并完成由对分组情况不知情的评估者进行的基线和治疗后评估。治疗后收集的主要结局包括1周戒烟、治疗期最后一周每天吸烟支数以及治疗期内的戒烟尝试次数。对至少参加一次干预会议的部分参与者(n = 152)进行的结局检查包括治疗期内1周、2周和4周戒烟情况。对参加三次或更多干预会议的参与者(n = 127)进行的分析包括吸烟支数减少50%的时间和首次戒烟尝试的时间。
16名参与者实现了戒烟(11.8%),吸烟量显著减少(基线M = 15.2,SD = 9.8;治疗后M = 7.5,SD = 7.7,p <.0001),且大多数人报告进行了戒烟尝试(n = 88,72.7%)。在任何戒烟或减少吸烟量结局方面,研究分组情况均无差异。吸烟量的显著减少通常在前两周内发生;然而,这些减少情况并不常转化为戒烟。
许多参与者在研究期间减少了吸烟并尝试戒烟。在精神卫生治疗环境中实施戒烟服务是可行的,如果按照最佳实践提供,行为干预或支持性干预方法都可能有所帮助。未来研究应探讨促进从减少吸烟量到戒烟转变的方法。本研究是一项临床试验的一部分,该试验已在www.clinicaltrials.gov上注册,注册号为NCT #00960375。