Development and acceptability of an educational video about a smoking cessation quitline for use in adult outpatient mental healthcare.
Adina S KazanLaura M PerryWasef F AtiyaHallie M VossSeowoo KimSanjana EaswarHannah N MercorellaAshley LewsonJames L RogersDodie ArnoldAmanda M RainesLisanne BrownTonia MooreMichael HoergerPublished in: Translational behavioral medicine (2021)
Tobacco use is a leading preventable cause of early mortality and is prevalent among adults with mental health diagnoses, especially in the southern USA. Increasing cessation resources in outpatient mental health care and targeting individuals most receptive to changing their behavior may improve cessation. Drawing on the transtheoretical model, our goals were to develop an educational video about the Louisiana Tobacco Quitline and evaluate its acceptability. We designed the video with knowledge derived from Louisiana-specific data (2016 Louisiana Adult Tobacco Survey, N = 6,469) and stakeholder feedback. Bivariate associations between demographic/tobacco-use characteristics and participants' stage of quitting (preparation phase vs. nonpreparation phase) were conducted, which informed design elements of the video. Four stakeholder advisory board meetings involving current smokers, mental health clinicians, and public health advocates convened to provide iterative feedback on the intervention. Our stakeholder advisory board (n = 10) and external stakeholders (n = 20) evaluated intervention acceptability. We found that 17.9% of Louisiana adults were current smokers, with 46.9% of them in the preparation phase of quitting. Using insights from data and stakeholders, we succeeded in producing a 2-min video about the Louisiana Tobacco Quitline which incorporated three themes identified as important by stakeholders: positivity, relatability, and approachability. Supporting acceptability, 96.7% of stakeholders rated the video as helpful and engaging. This study demonstrates the acceptability of combining theory, existing data, and iterative stakeholder feedback to develop a quitline educational video. Future research should examine whether the video can be used to reduce tobacco use.
Keyphrases
- smoking cessation
- mental health
- healthcare
- public health
- randomized controlled trial
- electronic health record
- computed tomography
- drug delivery
- deep learning
- mass spectrometry
- coronary artery disease
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cardiovascular disease
- machine learning
- adverse drug
- molecularly imprinted
- type diabetes
- risk factors
- artificial intelligence
- data analysis
- health insurance
- liquid chromatography