At a glance
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Financial Incentives for Smoking Cessation Among Disadvantaged Mothers With Young Children
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Best Practices, Financial Incentives, and 1 other intervention for Cigarette Smoking. Completed, enrolled 198 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Investigators will examine whether adding financial incentives and nicotine replacement dual therapy to current best practices for smoking cessation (i.e. referral to counseling using a telephone quit line) increases cessation rates in mothers and reduces second-hand smoke exposure in children. While perhaps more expensive upfront compared to best practices alone, the investigators hypothesize that this treatment approach will be a more cost-effective cessation intervention.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Five As plus referral to a quit line
Financial incentives provided contingent on biochemically confirmed smoking abstinence. Incentives are in the form of vouchers exchangeable for retail items and available through 12-weeks following quit date.
Nicotine patches and gum/lozenge provided together for dual therapy