Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin.
Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin; Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin.
Am J Prev Med. 2017 Dec;53(6):754-763. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.08.027. Epub 2017 Nov 2.
Low-income populations are especially likely to smoke and have difficulty quitting. This study evaluated a monetary incentive intended to increase smoking treatment engagement and abstinence among Medicaid recipients who smoke.
Two-group randomized clinical trial of Incentive (n=948) and Control interventions (n=952) for smoking.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Medicaid recipients recruited from primary care patients (n=920) and callers to the Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line (n=980).
Participants were offered five quitline cessation calls and were encouraged to obtain cessation medication (covered by Medicaid). All participants received payment for completing a baseline assessment and a 6-month smoking test. Only Incentive condition participants received compensation for taking counseling calls ($30 per call) and for biochemically verified abstinence at the 6-month visit ($40).
Seven-day point-prevalence smoking abstinence 6-months post study entry and cost/quit.
Incentive condition participants had significantly higher biochemically determined 7-day point-prevalence smoking abstinence rates 6 months after study induction than did Controls (21.6% vs 13.8%, respectively, p<0.0001). A positive treatment effect of incentives was present across other abstinence indices, but the size of effects and levels of abstinence varied considerably across indices. Incentive condition participants were also significantly more likely than non-incentivized Control participants to accept Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line treatment calls and their acceptance of calls mediated their attainment of higher abstinence rates at 6-month follow-up. The cost/quit/participant averaged $4,268.26 for the Control participants and $3,601.37 for the Incentive participants.
This study shows that fairly moderate levels of incentive payments for treatment engagement and abstinence (a total possible payment of $190) increased very low-income smokers' engagement and success in smoking cessation treatment.
This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov: NCT02713594.
低收入人群尤其有可能吸烟,并且难以戒烟。本研究评估了一项经济激励措施,旨在增加接受医疗补助的吸烟者接受治疗和戒烟的意愿。
一项针对激励组(n=948)和对照组(n=952)的随机临床试验,针对吸烟问题进行干预。
设置/参与者:从初级保健患者(n=920)和威斯康星州戒烟热线(n=980)来电者中招募医疗补助受助人。
参与者获得五次戒烟热线服务,并鼓励他们获得戒烟药物(由医疗补助支付)。所有参与者都因完成基线评估和 6 个月吸烟测试而获得报酬。只有激励条件的参与者在参加咨询电话时获得补偿(每次电话 30 美元),在 6 个月就诊时通过生物化学验证戒烟获得补偿(40 美元)。
研究入组后 6 个月的 7 天点前吸烟率和成本/戒烟率。
与对照组相比,激励条件组在研究诱导后 6 个月通过生物化学方法确定的 7 天点前吸烟率显著更高(分别为 21.6%和 13.8%,p<0.0001)。激励对治疗效果呈正相关,但在各种指标中,效果的大小和戒烟水平差异很大。激励条件组也比非激励对照组更有可能接受威斯康星州戒烟热线治疗电话,并且他们接受电话的意愿也促使他们在 6 个月随访时达到更高的戒烟率。每位参与者的平均成本/戒烟费用为对照组 4268.26 美元,激励组 3601.37 美元。
本研究表明,为治疗参与和戒烟提供适度的经济激励(总可能支付 190 美元)可以增加非常低收入吸烟者参与和成功戒烟治疗的意愿。
本研究在 www.clinicaltrials.gov 注册:NCT02713594。