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Mindfulness-based, Mobile Health (mHealth) Smoking Cessation Intervention in Vietnam

Mindfulness-based, Mobile Health (mHealth) Smoking Cessation Intervention in Vietnam

Recruiting
18-65 years
Male
Phase N/A

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Overview

The goals of this a three-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to evaluate the efficacy of mindfulness-based, culturally appropriate, and mobile phone-based smoking cessation intervention among Vietnamese adult male smokers.

The intervention will be delivered via text messages, involving 1,200 adult male smokers, with 400 participants in each of three intervention arms (Cessation Intervention - culturally-adapted smoking cessation messages that incorporate mindfulness; Education Intervention - messages that solely focus on health risks of smoking; Control - basic messages that solely focus on general healthy lifestyle). The investigator will assess cessation rates up to 6-month follow-up, as well as secondary outcomes of knowledge of smoking health risks; stages of change; quit attempts; self-efficacy; cigarettes per day; and nicotine dependence. The investigators hypothesize that participants in the Cessation Intervention group (who will receive culturally-adapted messages) will have higher rates of smoking abstinence, greater knowledge of the health risks of smoking, more transitions from pre-contemplation/contemplation stages to planning/action stages, higher likelihood of making a quit attempt, higher self-efficacy for abstaining from smoking, greater reductions in cigarette consumption, and lower nicotine dependence, compared to participants in the Education Intervention group and Control group.

Description

Cessation Intervention: Participants in the Cessation Intervention group will be divided into two groups (have intention to quit vs. not have intention to quit) based on the participants' stage of change (Transtheoretical Model) [1] at baseline assessment to receive different message libraries during the 12 week intervention. Participants who have intention to quit (at the action or preparation stage of change) will set the quit date at time of enrollment to the study. The two weeks before the quit date, participants will receive 2 messages per day with content focusing on health benefits of quitting, monetary costs of smoking, encouragement and some tips/strategies to prepare for the quit date. Two days around the quit date, participants will receive 3-4 messages per day, and the first five weeks participants will receive 2 messages per day. The content of messages in the first five weeks after the quit date is diverse, providing participants a lot of tips/strategies (including mindfulness practice) to deal with cravings/withdrawal symptoms, benefits of quitting, interactive messages asking the participants' mood and craving levels, motivating messages and encouraging to get supports from family/friends and other smoking cessation resources (i.e., quit line, website). During this period, participants will periodically be asked about maintain smoke-free, and based on the particpants' answer, further messages will provide encouragement to get back on track or stay focus to avoid relapse. From week 6 to week 12, participants will just receive one message per day, with content covers benefits of quitting smoking, motivating messages, tips to avoid cravings/relapse, and interactive messages asking about the participants' smoke free status. Participants who do not have intention to quit will receive messages from another library, with the frequency of one message per day throughout 12 weeks of the intervention. This message library will provide participants knowledge of negative effects of smoking with specific evidences, benefits of quitting, encouraging messages as well as messages to increase the participants self-efficacy in quitting smoking. From week 2 to week 7, participants in this group will receive an interactive message on every 7-day period, asking if the participants want to set a quit date in the next week. If participants answer yes to the question, the participants will be switch to the message library for those who have intention to quit as mentioned above.

Education Intervention Group and Control Group: Participants in the Education Intervention and Control groups will also receive one single message per day for the entire 12-week intervention period. Education Intervention messages will specifically focus on the health risks of smoking and secondhand smoking (i.e., education about health risks, without providing specific strategies for quitting). These messages will be taken from the text message library developed by NCI, and will be directly translated into Chinese and Vietnamese without cultural adaptions. Control messages will provide general health education (not including smoking), including promoting fruit and vegetable intake and low sodium intake; encouraging physical activity; and avoiding drug use/excess alcohol use. These messages will be translated from previous studies that use mHealth approaches to promote healthy lifestyles.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Current cigarette smokers (irrespective of the person's current intention to quit) who are living in the 6 communes in Hai Duong province
  • Ability to read and write in Vietnamese
  • Ownership of a cell phone and knowledge/ability to send and receive text messages
  • Do not have any plan to relocate in the next year
  • Agree to receive text messages for 12 weeks
  • Agree to be contacted by the research team for follow-ups interviews

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Do not agree to participate in the study
  • Have serious chronic illnesses or injuries that affect reading and comprehension
  • Cannot participate in the intervention activities during the proposed intervention period

Study details
    Smoking Cessation
    Mindfulness
    Telemedicine
    Smoking

NCT06228976

Hanoi University of Public Health

18 February 2024

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