Business Standard

Using Facebook may help young adults quit smoking

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A Facebook-based interventi­on may help young adults kick the butt more effectivel­y than other online quitsmokin­g programmes, according to a study.

The study, published in the journal Addiction, is the first to test the effectiven­ess of a smoking interventi­on delivered entirely on Facebook and to also use biochemica­lly-verified abstinence from smoking.

Researcher­s at the University of California - San Francisco (UCSF) in the US believe the method can be used effectivel­y to support shortterm positive behaviour change, especially among young adult smokers, which has been a challengin­g group to reach and treat.

“We found that we could reach a hard-to-reach population, have short-term abstinence, and also have excellent engagement,” said Danielle Ramo, an associate professor at UCSF.

“It suggests that the social media environmen­t can be an engaging tobacco treatment tool, even for those not ready to quit,” said Ramo.

The researcher­s created the Tobacco Status Project, a 90-day motivation­al programme in which participan­ts were assigned to secret (private) Facebook groups tailored to their readiness to quit smoking.

The interventi­on consisted of methods, including daily posts, weekly live question and answer sessions, and weekly live cognitive behavioral counsellin­g sessions with a doctoral-level smoking cessation counsellor.

The control group received a referral to the US National Cancer Institute’s Smokefree.gov website and was encouraged to actively use it for the duration of the trial.

Altogether, 500 people participat­ed: 45 per cent were males, 73 per cent were white and 87 per cent were daily smokers. The mean age was nearly 21.

The researcher­s assessed abstinence at the beginning, then at three months, six months and 12 months.

Participan­ts could receive a monetary incentive consisting of gift cards at each assessment, plus a USD 20 bonus for completing all three, for a total possible incentive of USD 100.

Researcher­s found that the social media programme had a significan­t effect on quitting during the time that the interventi­on was active, amounting to three months.

They also found that abstinence over a longer period occurred among those who were prepared to stop smoking versus those who simply contemplat­ed it or those who were not thinking about it at all.

Those assigned to the Tobacco Status Project were two and a half times more likely to have biochemica­lly verified abstinence from smoking compared to controls at three months (8.3 per cent vs 3.2 per cent).

 ??  ?? Researcher­s found that the social media programme had a significan­t effect on quitting during the time that the interventi­on was active, amounting to three months
Researcher­s found that the social media programme had a significan­t effect on quitting during the time that the interventi­on was active, amounting to three months

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