Effectiveness of a High School Smoking Cessation Program
- 1 April 2001
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 107 (4) , e50
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.107.4.e50
Abstract
Objective.: To evaluate the impact of a school-based smoking cessation program targeting adolescents interested in quitting.Design.: Randomized clinical trial over one school year.Setting.: Large public high school.Participants.: Students interested in quitting smoking.Intervention.: Seventy-four students were randomized to receive either: 1) a 6-week, 8-session, classroom-based, smoking cessation curriculum designed for adolescents (n = 35) or 2) an informational pamphlet on how to quit smoking with promise of the classroom curriculum in 3 months (n = 39).Outcome Measures.: Change in smoking behavior measured by: 1) self-reported smoking cessation and exhaled carbon monoxide <6 parts per million (smoke-free); 2) self-reported quit attempts; and 3) change in cigarettes per day (cpd) at the end of the 6-week curriculum and then 4, 10, and 20 weeks later. Saliva cotinine was also measured at these points to validate these outcome measures.Analysis.: Intention-to-treat.Results.: Participants in the classroom group attended an average of 4.4 sessions. At the end of the curriculum, the classroom group was significantly more likely to be smoke-free (59% vs 17%), to have tried to quit smoking (82% vs 54%), and to reduce mean cpd (7.0 vs 1.0). Four weeks later, these differences persisted: smoke-free (52% vs 20%), quit attempt (85% vs 60%), and reduction in mean cpd (6.6 vs 1.6). Changes in saliva cotinine were consistent with reported outcome measures; those who were smoke-free had a significant reduction in saliva cotinine at the end of the intervention, and at 4 weeks. At 10 and 20 weeks after the curriculum, 41% and 31%, respectively, of the classroom group remained smoke-free. Once participants in the pamphlet group underwent the classroom intervention (average attendance of 2.2 sessions) their cessation rates were similar to the initial group: 31% at the end of the curriculum and 27% 10 weeks later.Conclusion.: A school-based curriculum for adolescent smoking cessation is more effective than an informational pamphlet alone and reduces cigarette use by adolescents. More research is needed to test the reproducibility, sustainability, and generalizability of this curriculum to offer more smoking cessation options to teenagers.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Thirty-Four Adolescent Tobacco Use Cessation and Prevention Trials on Regular Users of Tobacco ProductsSubstance Use & Misuse, 1999
- A Preliminary Study of the Use of Peer Support in Smoking Cessation Programs for Pregnant AdolescentsJournal of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners, 1998
- Efficacy of a nicotine nasal spray in smoking cessation: a placebo-controlled, double-blind trialAddiction, 1995
- Meta-analysis on efficacy of nicotine replacement therapies in smoking cessationThe Lancet, 1994
- Meta-analytical review of the efficacy of nicotine chewing gum in smoking treatment programs.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1993
- The process of smoking cessation: An analysis of precontemplation, contemplation, and preparation stages of change.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1991
- Development and preliminary evaluation of a cessation program for adolescent smokers.Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 1987
- Enhancing Decision Behavior in High School “Smokers”International Journal of the Addictions, 1983
- Prevention and Treatment of Smoking in School Age ChildrenJournal of Drug Education, 1979
- Smoking Intervention: Comparing Three Methods in a High School SettingJournal of School Health, 1978