329811
“Creating Smokefree Living Together”: A Randomized Trial of Chinese American Adult Household Pairs
Method: A randomized controlled trial, conducted at a San Francisco county clinic, enrolled 205 pairs (n=95 intervention, n=110 control) of a Chinese smoker and household nonsmoker. Intervention participants received two group sessions and three follow-up calls, which emphasized secondhand smoke harms, discussed a lab report of baseline urine NNAL/Creatinine levels (reflects long-term exposure), and strategies for a smokefree household. Control participants received brief baseline education about cessation resources and being smokefree together. Outcomes at 6 months included self-reported smoker’s 30-day smoking abstinence or reduction, and nonsmoker’s elimination of smoke exposure.
Results: Participants were middle-aged (smokers: 53 years; nonsmokers: 50 years) and half women (smokers: 0%; nonsmokers: 99.5%), spoke English “not too well/not at all” (smokers: 76.4%; nonsmokers 71.9%), and recently immigrated to the U.S. (smokers: 11 years; nonsmokers: 9 years). Smokers mostly smoked daily (75.5%, average 10 cigarettes). NNAL was detected in 96.1% of smokers and 70.2% of nonsmokers (median NNAL/Cr: 64.3 pg/mg smokers, 2.4 pg/mg nonsmokers). Although there were no significant differences in 30-day smoking abstinence, more smokers in the intervention group reported reducing cigarettes as a quit strategy (59.1% vs. 43.0%, p=0.02) and reducing daily cigarette consumption (-4.9±7.5 vs. -2.3±5.3, p=0.01). Smokers in both groups reported increases in smokefree home rules (65% baseline to 76% at 6 months, p=.01). Nonsmokers in the intervention group reported more attempts to eliminate household smoke (50.5% vs. 35.9%, p=0.04).
Conclusion: This smokefree intervention demonstrates promising results for smokers reducing tobacco use and nonsmokers reducing smoke exposure in the household at 6 months.
Learning Areas:
Implementation of health education strategies, interventions and programsSocial and behavioral sciences
Learning Objectives:
Describe a smokefree household intervention for Chinese American adult household pairs.
Discuss the intervention effects on tobacco use and behaviors to reduce smoke exposure in the household.
Keyword(s): Tobacco Control
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: my research interests include tobacco cessation, culturally responsive health promotion interventions, and Asian American populations.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.