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Takore i te Kai Ava'ava (Quit smoking), a mCessation Program Adapted for the Cook Islands: Indicators of Potential for Tobacco Control.

Teinatangi RingiJosephine Aumea HermanMaina TairiRosie DobsonVili NosaRobyn WhittakerJudith McCool
Published in: Asia-Pacific journal of public health (2021)
Mobile phone-based smoking cessation interventions (mCessation) are an established evidence-based intervention designed to support smokers to quit. Evidence of impact to date is modestly positive but skewed in favor of high-resourced countries, with less evidence of value added to low-resourced settings. Takore i te Kai Ava'ava, a text message-based smoking cessation program, was delivered to smokers living on the island of Rarotonga in 2019. Eighty-eight smokers consented to take part. Participants completed a baseline questionnaire about current smoking behavior and previous quit attempts; follow-up measures at 2 months assess quit attempts feedback on the program. Thirty-two people completed the follow-up interviews; 10 (31%) had not smoked in the past 7 days, 23 (72%) reported a serious quit attempt, and 29 (91%) felt the program was effective for the Cook Islands. Takore i te Kai Ava'ava was deemed to be highly acceptable and potentially cost-effective.
Keyphrases
  • smoking cessation
  • quality improvement
  • replacement therapy
  • cross sectional
  • climate change
  • human health