Authors
Robert C Klesges, G Wayne Talcott, Melissa A Little, Indika V Mallawaarachchi, X-Q Wang, Chase A Aycock, Marc A Patience, Jennifer P Halbert, Kara P Wiseman, Jon O Ebbert
Publication date
2023/10/1
Journal
Nicotine and Tobacco Research
Volume
25
Issue
10
Pages
1633-1640
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Introduction
We sought to determine what type of treatment reengagement after smoking relapse would increase long-term cessation.
Aims and Methods
Participants were military personnel, retirees, and family members (TRICARE beneficiaries) recruited across the United States from August 2015 through June 2020. At baseline, consented participants (n = 614) received a validated, four-session, telephonic tobacco-cessation intervention with free nicotine replacement therapy. At the 3-month follow-up, 264 participants who failed to quit or relapsed were offered the opportunity to reengage in cessation. Of these, 134 were randomized into three reengagement conditions: (1) repeat initial intervention (“recycle”), (2) Smoking reduction with eventual cessation goal (“rate reduction”), or (3) Choose #1 or #2 (“choice”). Prolonged abstinence and 7-day point prevalence abstinence …
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