"Look at your health": Outcomes associated with a computer-assisted smoking cessation counseling intervention for community college students

Title"Look at your health": Outcomes associated with a computer-assisted smoking cessation counseling intervention for community college students
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsProkhorov, AV, Yost, T, Mullin-Jones, M, de Moor, C, Ford, KH, Marani, S, Kilfoy, BA, Hein, JP, Hudmon, KS, Emmons, KM
JournalAddictive Behaviors
Volume33
Pagination757-771
Date PublishedJun
Publication Languageeng
ISBN Number0306-4603 (Print)0306-4603 (Linking)
Accession Number18280668
KeywordsAdult, Behavior Therapy/methods, Counseling/education/methods, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Smoking Cessation/*methods/psychology, Students/*psychology, Treatment Outcome
Abstract

Community college students represent 44% of all students enrolled in U.S. higher education facilities. To our knowledge, no previous smoking cessation intervention has targeted community college students. Previous studies suggest that a motivational smoking cessation intervention could be successful for young adult smokers. Combining motivational interviewing sessions with personalized health feedback is likely to increase participants' motivation to quit and movement through the stages of change. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a smoking cessation program based on these premises. We designed a computer-assisted, counselor-delivered smoking cessation program that addresses personal health risks and readiness to change smoking behavior among community college students. A group-randomized, controlled trial was used to assess the intervention in a sample of 426 students (58.5% females; mean age, 22.8+/-4.7 years) from 15 pair-matched campuses. At the 10-month follow-up assessment, the cotinine-validated smoking cessation rates were 16.6% in the experimental condition and 10.1% in the standard care condition (p=0.07). Our results indicate that our computer-assisted intervention holds considerable promise in reducing smoking among community college students.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=18280668
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