Centre for Health Policy and Management, Trinity College Dublin School of Medicine, Dublin 2, Ireland
Centre for Health Policy and Management, Trinity College Dublin School of Medicine, Dublin 2, Ireland.
BMJ Open. 2022 Jun 15;12(6):e060457. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-060457.
Smoking is harmful to human health and programmes to help people stop smoking are key public health efforts that improve individual and population health outcomes. Research shows that financial incentives improve the success of stop smoking programmes. However, a better understanding of how they work is needed to better inform policy and to support building capability for implementation.The aims of this study: (1) To review the international literature to understand: How, why, in what circumstances and for whom financial incentives improve the success of stop smoking interventions among general population groups and among pregnant women. (2) To provide recommendations for how to best use financial incentives in efforts to promote smoking cessation.
A realist review of published international literature will be undertaken to understand how, why, for whom and in which circumstances financial incentives contribute to success in stopping smoking for general population groups and among pregnant women. Systematic searches were undertaken on 16 February 2022 of five academic databases: MEDLINE (ovid), Embase.com, CIHAHL, Scopus and PsycINFO. Iterative searching using citation tracking and of grey literature will be undertaken as needed. Using Pawson and Tilley's iterative realist review approach, data collected will be screened, selected, coded, analysed and synthesised into a set of explanatory theoretical findings.
Ethical approval is not required for this review as data sources to be included are previously published. The study will provide important findings for policy-makers and health system leaders to guide the development of stop smoking services which use incentives, for example, as part of the Health Service Executive's Tobacco Free Programme in Ireland. Understanding how contextual factors impact implementation and programmatic success is key to developing a more effective public health approach to stop smoking. Our dissemination strategy will be developed with our stakeholders.
CRD42022298941.
吸烟有害健康,帮助人们戒烟的计划是改善个人和人口健康结果的关键公共卫生措施。研究表明,经济激励措施可以提高戒烟计划的成功率。然而,为了更好地为政策提供信息,并支持实施能力建设,我们需要更好地了解它们是如何发挥作用的。本研究的目的是:(1)回顾国际文献,了解:经济激励措施如何、为何、在何种情况下以及对哪些人群可以提高一般人群和孕妇群体戒烟干预措施的成功率。(2)为如何在促进戒烟工作中最好地使用经济激励措施提供建议。
将对已发表的国际文献进行真实主义审查,以了解经济激励措施如何、为何、对哪些人群以及在何种情况下有助于一般人群和孕妇戒烟的成功。于 2022 年 2 月 16 日在五个学术数据库中进行了系统搜索:MEDLINE(ovid)、Embase.com、CIHAHL、Scopus 和 PsycINFO。如有需要,将使用 Pawson 和 Tilley 的迭代真实主义审查方法进行迭代搜索和灰色文献搜索。收集的数据将经过筛选、选择、编码、分析和综合,形成一组解释性的理论发现。
由于纳入的数据来源是先前发表的,因此本审查不需要伦理批准。该研究将为决策者和卫生系统领导者提供重要的发现,以指导激励措施的戒烟服务的发展,例如,作为爱尔兰卫生服务行政署的《无烟计划》的一部分。了解环境因素如何影响实施和项目成功是制定更有效的公共卫生戒烟方法的关键。我们的传播策略将与利益相关者共同制定。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42022298941。