Dr. Brunette, Dr. Pratt, and Dr. Bartels are with the Department of Psychiatry, and Dr. Scherer is with the Department of Community and Family Medicine, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, New Hampshire. Dr. Brunette, Dr. Pratt, and Dr. Bartels are also with the Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire, where Dr. Ferron, Ms. Santos, Ms. Williams, Mr. Kosydar, and Ms. Wolfe are affiliated. Dr. Sigmon is with the Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington. Dr. Lotz and Ms. Capuchino are with the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services, Concord.
Psychiatr Serv. 2018 Mar 1;69(3):274-280. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.201700245. Epub 2017 Nov 15.
Medicaid beneficiaries with severe mental illnesses are a financially disadvantaged group with high rates of smoking and poor cessation outcomes. This study examined whether abstinence-contingent monetary incentives improved outcomes when added to cessation treatments at community mental health centers: prescriber visit for pharmacotherapy only (PV only), prescriber visit and facilitated quitline (PV+Q), and prescriber visit and telephone cognitive-behavioral therapy (PV+CBT).
During 2012-2015, a total of 1,468 adult, daily smoking Medicaid beneficiaries with mental illnesses received Web-based motivational tobacco education. Eligible participants who wanted cessation treatment (N=661) were randomly assigned to treatment with or without abstinence-contingent incentives for four weeks after a quit attempt and assessed for biologically verified abstinence at three, six, nine, and 12 months. To examine intervention effect on abstinence over time, logistic generalized linear models estimated with generalized estimating equations were used, with missing observations imputed as smoking.
Participants included smokers with schizophrenia disorders (N=148), bipolar disorder (N=150), major depressive disorder (N=158), and anxiety and other disorders (N=205). There was no significant effect of intervention (PV only, PV+Q, and PV+CBT). However, participants who received monetary incentives were more likely to be abstinent from smoking over time (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=1.77, p=.009). Post hoc comparisons indicated greater abstinence at 12 months in PV+Q with incentives than in PV+Q without incentives (14% versus 4% abstinent, AOR=3.94, p=.014). Treatment participation and cessation outcomes did not differ significantly between diagnostic groups.
Abstinence-contingent incentives improved cessation outcomes among financially disadvantaged smokers with mental illness receiving tobacco treatment at community mental health centers.
患有严重精神疾病的医疗补助受益人是一个经济处于不利地位的群体,他们吸烟率高,戒烟效果差。本研究考察了在社区心理健康中心的戒烟治疗中加入基于戒烟的金钱奖励是否会改善治疗效果:仅接受药物治疗的医生就诊(PV 仅)、医生就诊和促进戒烟热线(PV+Q)以及医生就诊和电话认知行为疗法(PV+CBT)。
在 2012 年至 2015 年期间,共有 1468 名患有精神疾病的成年、每日吸烟的医疗补助受益人接受了基于网络的动机性烟草教育。有戒烟意愿的合格参与者(N=661)在尝试戒烟后四周内随机分配接受或不接受基于戒烟的奖励治疗,并在三个月、六个月、九个月和十二个月时进行生物验证的戒烟评估。为了考察干预措施对随时间变化的戒烟效果,使用广义估计方程对数广义线性模型进行了分析,对于缺失的观察值,采用吸烟的方式进行了填补。
参与者包括患有精神分裂症障碍的吸烟者(N=148)、双相情感障碍(N=150)、重度抑郁症(N=158)和焦虑症及其他障碍(N=205)。干预措施(PV 仅、PV+Q 和 PV+CBT)没有显著效果。然而,接受金钱奖励的参与者随着时间的推移更有可能戒烟(调整后的优势比 [AOR]=1.77,p=.009)。事后比较表明,在有奖励的 PV+Q 组中,12 个月时的戒烟率更高(14%与 4%戒烟,AOR=3.94,p=.014)。在不同的诊断组之间,治疗参与度和戒烟效果没有显著差异。
在社区心理健康中心接受烟草治疗的经济处于不利地位的患有精神疾病的吸烟者中,基于戒烟的奖励可以改善戒烟效果。