Treatment for Cigarette Smoking Among Depressed Mental Health Outpatients: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Sharon M. Hall, PhD,
Janice Y. Tsoh, PhD,
Judith J. Prochaska, PhD, MPH,
Stuart Eisendrath, MD,
Joseph S. Rossi, PhD,
Colleen A. Redding, PhD,
Amy B. Rosen, PsyD,
Marc Meisner, MD,
Gary L. Humfleet, PhD and
Julie A. Gorecki, MA
Sharon M. Hall, Janice Y. Tsoh, Judith J. Prochaska, Stuart Eisendrath, Gary L. Humfleet, and Julie A. Gorecki are with the University of California, San Francisco. Joseph S. Rossi and Colleen A. Redding are with the University of Rhode Island Cancer Prevention Research Center, Kingston, RI. Marc Meisner is with Kaiser Permanente, San Rafael, Calif. At the time of this study, Amy B. Rosen was with the University of California, San Francisco.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Sharon M. Hall, PhD, University of California, San Francisco, Treatment Research Center, 401 Parnassus Avenue, Box 0984, San Francisco, CA, 94143 (e-mail: shall{at}lppi.ucsf.edu).
Objectives. Using a brief contact control, we tested the efficacyof a staged care intervention to reduce cigarette smoking amongpsychiatric patients in outpatient treatment for depression.
Methods. We conducted a randomized clinical trial that includedassessments at baseline and at months 3, 6, 12, and 18. Threehundred twenty-two patients in mental health outpatient treatmentwho were diagnosed with depression and smoked 1 cigarette perday participated. The desire to quit smoking was not a prerequisitefor participation. Staged care intervention participants receivedcomputerized motivational feedback at baseline and at 3, 6,and 12 months and were offered a 6-session psychological counselingand pharmacological cessation treatment program. Brief contactcontrol participants received a self-help guide and referrallist of local smoking-treatment providers.
Results. As we hypothesized, abstinence rates among staged careintervention participants exceeded those of brief contact controlparticipants at months 12 and 18. Significant differences favoringstaged care intervention also were found in occurrence of aquit attempt and stringency of abstinence goal.
Conclusion. The data suggest that individuals in psychiatrictreatment for depression can be aided in quitting smoking throughuse of staged care interventions and that smoking cessationinterventions used in the general population can be implementedin psychiatric outpatient settings.
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