The overall objective of this program project is to develop and evaluate an integrated public health intervention that can be delivered by television and in public health clinic settings and that will promote smoking cessation among female smokers with high school education or less. The theme of this program project is reaching and motivating these women to participate in a smoking cessation intervention, attempt to quit, quit and remain abstinent. The theoretically grounded intervention approach combines use of television and written self-help materials in Projects 1 and 2, and staff in public health clinics with self-help materials in Project 3. The televised intervention (Project 1) will be developed as part of the 1993 Great American Smoke-Out, in collaboration with the Illinois Division o the American Cancer Society (ACS), WMAQ-TV (The Chicago NBC affiliate), the clinic staff, and creative staff from a minority owned-public relations firm, Third Wave, Inc. An intervention component will assess the transferability of this strategy to videotape. Project 2 will assess the effectiveness of motivation telephone interviews as a strategy for maintaining abstinence after successfully quitting or for recycling following relapse after a 48-hour quit episode. Institutionalization of the maintenance component will assess whether this intervention can be delivered by ACS volunteers. Project 3 will assess the effectiveness of a provider-delivered cessation intervention supplemented by a personalized letter and telephone motivation interview in promoting consideration of abstinence, quitting, and maintaining abstinence. The institutionalization component is designed to evaluate how much of the clinic-based program remains in place and whether the adjuncts can be picked up by volunteers. These projects are supported by three core components. Evaluation will be carried out throughout the program and a population panel, selected prior to the intervention and followed with those who register, allows population-based estimates of the effects of various program components.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA042760-09
Application #
2090932
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (SRC (F1))
Project Start
1986-07-01
Project End
1997-02-28
Budget Start
1995-03-01
Budget End
1996-02-29
Support Year
9
Fiscal Year
1995
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Illinois at Chicago
Department
Miscellaneous
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
121911077
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60612
Turner, Lindsey R; Mermelstein, Robin; Hitsman, Brian et al. (2008) Social support as a moderator of the relationship between recent history of depression and smoking cessation among lower-educated women. Nicotine Tob Res 10:201-12
Crittenden, Kathleen S; Manfredi, Clara; Cho, Young I et al. (2007) Smoking cessation processes in low-SES women: the impact of time-varying pregnancy status, health care messages, stress, and health concerns. Addict Behav 32:1347-66
Manfredi, Clara; Cho, Young Ik; Crittenden, Kathleen S et al. (2007) A path model of smoking cessation in women smokers of low socio-economic status. Health Educ Res 22:747-56
Manfredi, Clara; Crittenden, Kathleen S; Cho, Young Ik et al. (2004) Long-term effects (up to 18 months) of a smoking cessation program among women smokers in public health clinics. Prev Med 38:10-9
Mermelstein, Robin; Hedeker, Donald; Wong, Siu Chi (2003) Extended telephone counseling for smoking cessation: does content matter? J Consult Clin Psychol 71:565-74
Manfredi, C; Crittenden, K; Cho, Y I et al. (2001) Maintenance of a smoking cessation program in public health clinics beyond the experimental evaluation period. Public Health Rep 116 Suppl 1:120-35
Turner, L R; Morera, O F; Johnson, T P et al. (2001) Examining the effectiveness of a community-based self-help program to increase women's readiness for smoking cessation. Am J Community Psychol 29:465-91
Warnecke, R B; Morera, O; Turner, L et al. (2001) Changes in self-efficacy and readiness for smoking cessation among women with high school or less education. J Health Soc Behav 42:97-110
Manfredi, C; Crittenden, K S; Cho, Y I et al. (2000) Minimal smoking cessation interventions in prenatal, family planning, and well-child public health clinics. Am J Public Health 90:423-7
Manfredi, C; Crittenden, K S; Cho, Y I et al. (2000) The effect of a structured smoking cessation program, independent of exposure to existing interventions. Am J Public Health 90:751-6

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