Abstract
As residential treatment programs consider adopting smoke-free policies, treatment providers question whether such policies interfere with patient recruitment and retention. This study assesses the effect of a smoke-free policy on retention using a sample of 155 low-income, mainly minority youth, randomly assigned to two long-term adolescent residential programs at the New Jersey Substance Abuse Treatment Campus. One of these programs has a smoke-free policy, the other does not. Smoking rates are high for the sample. Eighty-five percent of those adolescents smoke, on average half a pack daily, and 39% smoke a pack or more daily. Differential dropout rates between programs for key time periods related to tobacco withdrawal were analyzed to assess the potential effect of smoking policy on retention. Differential dropout rates at the point of program assignment, in the first two days of residency (p = .43), and for the first two weeks of residency (p = .37) show no differences between programs. While analyses showed heavy smokers are more likely than others to leave treatment early, they were likely to leave from either program regardless of smoking policy. As well, verbal expressions of dissatisfaction with smoking policy did not result in drop outs. These results indicate that smoke-free policies have no detrimental effect on program retention.

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