Purpose

This study aims to develop a Mindfulness Smartphone Intervention with Contingency Management (MSI-CM) for smoking cessation that can be readily available to depressed smokers receiving outpatient psychiatric treatment. This project is expected to result in the development of an effective intervention that will produce preliminary data showing increased short-term cessation success in depressed smokers receiving outpatient psychiatric treatment. It is anticipated that this smoking cessation intervention will have potential for broad reach to outpatient psychiatric treatment programs and have a significant overall impact in reducing smoking-related morbidity and mortality by enhancing smoking cessation rates in at-risk populations.

Condition

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • be 18 years of age - be current daily smokers (i.e., at least 5 cigarettes for the past 6 months) - English-speaking - motivated to quit smoking (i.e., "intent to quit in the next 3 months") - have a diagnosis of depressive or bipolar disorders - engaged in outpatient psychiatric treatment (i.e., has been receiving outpatient psychiatric treatment for at least 3 months AND has received counseling from social worker at outpatient psychiatric treatment clinic at least 3 times in the past 3 months)

Exclusion Criteria

  • acute psychiatric symptomatology which precludes study participation including current active suicidal ideation - diagnosis of psychotic disorders - current diagnosis of dementia or cognitive impairment sufficient to impair provision of informed consent or study participation - patient's inability to provide consent for study participation due to his/her inability to demonstrate an understanding of study procedures as contained in the statement of informed consent, after no more than two explanations - current clinical diagnosis of intellectual development disorder or autistic disorder - current (non-nicotine) substance use disorder with the exception of individuals holding 6 months of sobriety and/or receiving treatment including counseling and medications (i.e. methadone, suboxone) - intention to quit smoking using pharmacotherapy other than transdermal nicotine patches - pregnant, breastfeeding, or planning to become pregnant within 6 months - significant history of cardiovascular disease (a standard contraindication for nicotine patch use), - patient does not have a stable home address where the research team could reliably reach patient, or - regular (3 or more times in the past month) use of other tobacco products (i.e., cigars, cigarillos, chewing tobacco) or marijuana

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Mindfulness with Contingency Management
The intervention (MSI-CM) will involve two individual pre-quit in-person sessions and two post-quit phone counseling sessions, a series of brief mindfulness trainings that will be delivered via smartphone, that prompts participants to practice a mindfulness exercise five times a day while abstinent during the 2-week incentivized abstinence period (using CM) plus an additional 2 weeks (without CM) following the participant's target quit date. The MSI-CM participants will be asked to provide CO video via smartphone twice daily with monetary incentives provided (CM). Participants will receive monetary incentives contingent on each confirmed CO level (less than 7 ppm) for the CM period. We will use CM as an adjunct strategy to enhance the efficacy of mindfulness training.
  • Behavioral: Mindfulness with Contingency Management
Active Comparator
Active Control
Participants assigned to the control group will receive two individual pre-quit in-person sessions and two post-quit phone counseling sessions, similar to the MSI-CM except for mindfulness introduction/discussion. Participants in the control group will receive the same monetary incentives on average as the participants in the MSI-CM for submitting CO videos, regardless of CO levels (non-abstinent contingent), during the 2-week post-TQD period. Each participant in the group (the non-contingent CO group) will be yoked to a single participant (selected randomly with stratification) in the MSI-CM. The yoked participant receives the same amount of monetary incentives as his or her matched participant in the contingent CO (MSI-CM) group.
  • Behavioral: Active Control

More Details

Status
Completed
Sponsor
Fordham University

Study Contact

Detailed Description

The proposed study will develop a Mindfulness Smartphone Intervention with Contingency Management (MSI-CM) for smoking cessation that can be readily available to depressed smokers receiving outpatient psychiatric treatment. The intervention will involve a series of brief mindfulness training that will be delivered via smartphone, that prompts patients to practice a mindfulness exercise multiple times a day while abstinent: 1) 10-days prior to their target quit date and 2) during the 2-week incentivized abstinence period (using CM) plus an additional 2 weeks (without CM) following their target quit date. We will use CM as an adjunct strategy to enhance the efficacy of mindfulness training due to its utility in producing short-term abstinence, so as to provide opportunities to practice mindfulness without smoking in one's natural environment. We will accomplish this objective by pursuing the following specific aims (in 2 phases): Phase 1: To develop the MSI-CM intervention intended to improve smoking cessation success among depressed smokers receiving outpatient psychiatric treatment. 1a. We will collaborate with TelASK, Inc. to develop a prototype of a smartphone intervention (MSI-CM). 1b. We will conduct preliminary pilot testing of MSI-CM, in an iterative fashion, with 10 smokers receiving outpatient psychiatric treatment for depression. Phase 2: To conduct a preliminary, randomized controlled trial (RCT) with depressed 60 smokers receiving outpatient psychiatric treatment.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.