Anguiano Beatriz, Brown-Johnson Cati, Rosas Lisa G, Pechmann Cornelia, Prochaska Judith J
Stanford Prevention Research Center, Department of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.
Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute, Palo Alto, CA, United States.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2017 Feb 8;5(2):e12. doi: 10.2196/mhealth.6684.
Latinos are the largest minority group in the United States, and in California they outnumber non-Hispanic whites. Smoking cessation programs tailored for Latino culture, and this population's specific smoking patterns, are needed. Online social networks for smoking cessation have high potential for Latinos, but have not been tested to date.
Building a research program on social media apps for cancer prevention in diverse populations, this qualitative study assessed acceptability of tobacco treatment that was distributed via social media for Latino smokers.
We conducted three focus groups with Latino adults who were former and current smokers recruited from Santa Clara County, California in 2015 (N=32). We assessed participants' smoking histories, attempts to quit, social media exposure, and receptivity to a social media-based smoking cessation intervention. Audio transcripts were translated and coded for themes.
Participants reported factors driving their tobacco use and motivations to quit, and emphasized the importance of community and family in influencing their smoking initiation, cravings and triggers, attempts to quit, and abstinence. Participants valued the communal aspect of social media and suggested strategically tailoring groups based on key features (eg, age, gender, language preference). Participants reported preferring visual, educational, and motivational messages that were connected with existing services.
Participants generally voiced acceptability of a social media-delivered intervention to help them quit smoking, viewed the intervention as well-equipped for catering to the strong community orientation of Latinos, and suggested that the platform was able to address variation within the population through strategic group creation. As a group member reflected, "Podemos hacerlo juntos" (We can do it together).
拉丁裔是美国最大的少数族裔群体,在加利福尼亚州,他们的人数超过了非西班牙裔白人。需要针对拉丁裔文化以及该群体特定吸烟模式量身定制戒烟项目。在线社交网络戒烟对拉丁裔具有很大潜力,但迄今为止尚未经过测试。
作为一个针对不同人群开展的关于利用社交媒体应用预防癌症的研究项目的一部分,这项定性研究评估了通过社交媒体向拉丁裔吸烟者提供的烟草治疗的可接受性。
2015年,我们对从加利福尼亚州圣克拉拉县招募的曾吸烟和正在吸烟的拉丁裔成年人进行了三个焦点小组访谈(N = 32)。我们评估了参与者的吸烟史、戒烟尝试、社交媒体使用情况以及对基于社交媒体的戒烟干预措施的接受程度。对音频记录进行翻译并编码以提取主题。
参与者报告了促使他们使用烟草的因素以及戒烟动机,并强调社区和家庭在影响他们开始吸烟、烟瘾和触发因素、戒烟尝试及戒烟成功方面的重要性。参与者重视社交媒体的社区属性,并建议根据关键特征(如年龄、性别、语言偏好)进行策略性分组。参与者表示更喜欢与现有服务相关的视觉、教育和激励性信息。
参与者普遍表示接受通过社交媒体提供的帮助他们戒烟的干预措施,认为该干预措施能够很好地迎合拉丁裔强烈的社区导向性,并建议该平台能够通过策略性创建群组来应对人群内部的差异。正如一位小组成员所反映的:“Podemos hacerlo juntos”(我们可以一起做到)。