Center for American Indian Community Health, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS.
Department of Anthropology, Center for American Indian Studies, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, KS.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2018 Apr 2;20(5):552-560. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx030.
Prevalence of cigarette smoking is highest among American Indians, yet few culturally appropriate smoking cessation programs have yet been developed and tested for multi-tribal American Indian adult populations. This study examined implementation of the All Nations Breath of Life culturally tailored smoking cessation program in multi-tribal urban and suburban American Indian communities in seven locations across five states (N = 312).
This single-arm study used community-based participatory research to conduct a 12-week intervention whose primary purpose was to curb commercial tobacco use among American Indians. Participants were followed through month 6 in person and month 12 via telephone. The primary outcome was continuous abstinence from recreational cigarette smoking at 6 months post-baseline, verified through voluntary provision of salivary cotinine levels.
At program completion (12 weeks post-baseline), 53.3% of program completers remained abstinent; labeling those lost to follow-up as smokers resulted in a 41.4% quit rate. At 6 months post-baseline (primary endpoint), 31.1% of retained participants quit smoking (p < .0001 compared to the highest quit rates among multi-tribal populations reported in the literature, 7%); final quit rate was 22.1% labeling those lost to follow-up as smokers (p = .002). Retention rate at endpoint was 71.2%. 12-month follow-up was attempted with all participants and had a retention rate of 49.0%. Of those participants reached, 34.0% were smoke-free.
All Nations Breath of Life shows promise as a smoking cessation program for multi-tribal urban American Indian communities. It can be successfully implemented in a variety of urban settings.
This is the first large feasibility study of a culturally tailored smoking cessation program for American Indians with good cessation and retention rates in a multi-tribal urban American Indian population. It shows that All Nations Breath of Life can be implemented in multiple urban settings across five states. To our knowledge, this is the first program of its kind to be implemented across multiple heterogeneous urban locations and to include salivary cotinine testing for verification of self-report data across these locations.
吸烟在美洲印第安人中最为普遍,但针对多部落美洲印第安成年人群体的文化适宜的戒烟计划却寥寥无几。本研究在五个州的七个地点的多部落城市和郊区美洲印第安社区中,对经过调整以适应全民族生命气息(All Nations Breath of Life)文化的戒烟计划的实施情况进行了检查(N = 312)。
这项单臂研究采用社区参与式研究,开展了为期 12 周的干预,主要目的是遏制美洲印第安人使用商业烟草。参与者在基线后 6 个月进行面对面随访,在 12 个月时通过电话进行随访。主要结局是在基线后 6 个月时连续戒除娱乐性香烟吸烟,通过自愿提供唾液可替宁水平来验证。
在项目完成时(基线后 12 周),53.3%的项目完成者保持不吸烟;将随访失访者标记为吸烟者,戒烟率为 41.4%。在基线后 6 个月(主要终点),保留的参与者中有 31.1%戒烟(p <.0001,与文献中报告的多部落人群中最高的戒烟率(7%)相比);最终戒烟率为 22.1%,将随访失访者标记为吸烟者(p =.002)。终点时的保留率为 71.2%。对所有参与者进行了 12 个月的随访,保留率为 49.0%。与那些达到的参与者中,34.0%是不吸烟者。
全民族生命气息计划为多部落城市美洲印第安社区的戒烟计划提供了希望。它可以在各种城市环境中成功实施。
这是第一项针对美洲印第安人的文化适宜戒烟计划的大型可行性研究,在多部落城市美洲印第安人群体中具有良好的戒烟和保留率。它表明全民族生命气息计划可以在五个州的多个城市环境中实施。据我们所知,这是第一个在多个异构城市地点实施的同类计划,并包括唾液可替宁测试,以验证这些地点的自我报告数据。