A randomized controlled trial of Telephone Counseling with smokeless tobacco users: The ChewFree Minnesota study

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Abstract

Although a considerable body of evidence supports telephone quit lines for smoking cessation, much less is known about the effectiveness of proactive Telephone Counseling with smokeless tobacco (ST) users. We conducted a randomized controlled trial comparing Telephone Counseling with the distribution of a self-help manual for ST cessation. We recruited 406 adult ST users throughout the state of Minnesota and randomized them to receive either: (a) a self-help manual (Manual only) or (b) a self-help manual plus proactive telephone-based cessation counseling (Telephone Counseling). The telephone-based treatment included up to four calls in support of quitting, and personalized various cognitive and behavioral strategies that are generally considered effective in tobacco cessation (such as setting a quit date, examining patterns of use, developing stress reduction skills, avoiding known triggers to use). Participants were surveyed by phone at 3 and 6 months to assess both point prevalence and continued abstinence. Prolonged abstinence from all tobacco was 6.8% and 30.9% (p

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APA

Boyle, R. G., Enstad, C., Asche, S. E., Thoele, M. J., Sherwood, N. E., Severson, H. H., … Solberg, L. I. (2008). A randomized controlled trial of Telephone Counseling with smokeless tobacco users: The ChewFree Minnesota study. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 10(9), 1433–1440. https://doi.org/10.1080/14622200802279872

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