A Family-Based Approach To Reduce Smoking in Vietnamese Men
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Smoking Cessation, Tobacco Consumers |
Therapuetic Areas: | Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - Any |
Updated: | 4/2/2016 |
Start Date: | April 2014 |
End Date: | August 2016 |
Contact: | Janice Y Tsoh, PhD |
Email: | jtsoh@lppi.ucsf.edu |
Phone: | 415-502-8438 |
The goals of the study are to develop smoking cessation intervention using lay health worker
(LHW) outreach and family involvement targeting Vietnamese Americans ages 18 and above in
Santa Clara County, CA, to evaluate efficacy of the proposed intervention. The study is a
two-arm randomized controlled trial targeting a total of 18 lay health workers (LHW) and 108
dyads of a smoker and a family member from the same household. The hypotheses are:
H. At 6-month post initiation of the intervention, Vietnamese male daily smokers who receive
the proposed ―Quit Smoking For a Healthy Family Intervention, a Family-based Intervention
(FI), will be more likely to achieve biochemically verified 7-day point prevalence of
smoking abstinence when compared to those receiving an attention control intervention (CI).
H2. At 6-month, FI participants we be more likely to report making at least one 24-hour quit
attempt than those in CI.
H3. At 6-month, FI participants will be more likely to report using a recommended
evidence-based smoking cessation resource (quitline, FDA-approved smoking cessation
medications, advice from health professionals) than those in CI
(LHW) outreach and family involvement targeting Vietnamese Americans ages 18 and above in
Santa Clara County, CA, to evaluate efficacy of the proposed intervention. The study is a
two-arm randomized controlled trial targeting a total of 18 lay health workers (LHW) and 108
dyads of a smoker and a family member from the same household. The hypotheses are:
H. At 6-month post initiation of the intervention, Vietnamese male daily smokers who receive
the proposed ―Quit Smoking For a Healthy Family Intervention, a Family-based Intervention
(FI), will be more likely to achieve biochemically verified 7-day point prevalence of
smoking abstinence when compared to those receiving an attention control intervention (CI).
H2. At 6-month, FI participants we be more likely to report making at least one 24-hour quit
attempt than those in CI.
H3. At 6-month, FI participants will be more likely to report using a recommended
evidence-based smoking cessation resource (quitline, FDA-approved smoking cessation
medications, advice from health professionals) than those in CI
Inclusion Criteria:
- self-identified as Vietnamese, Vietnamese-American, or Vietnamese-Chinese;
- Vietnamese speaking;
- reside in the Santa Clara County, California
- plan to stay in the area (Santa Clara County, California) for the next 6 months
- for the smoker participants, they must be male and have smoked at least 1 cigarette
daily in the past 7 days.
- for family member participants, the participant must live in the same household as
the smoker participant to form a dyad.
- provide a valid contact telephone number for pre- and post-intervention assessments.
Exclusion Criteria:
- For smoker participants, currently engaging in assisted smoking cessation efforts
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