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Article

A randomized controlled trial to compare group motivational interviewing to very brief advice for the effectiveness of a workplace smoking cessation counseling intervention

Details

Citation

Caponnetto P, Maglia M, Floresta D, Ledda C, Vitale E, Polosa R & Rapisarda V (2020) A randomized controlled trial to compare group motivational interviewing to very brief advice for the effectiveness of a workplace smoking cessation counseling intervention. Journal of Addictive Diseases, 38 (4), pp. 465-474. https://doi.org/10.1080/10550887.2020.1782564

Abstract
Background Studies show that smokers have a lower work performance due to time spent smoking, increased fatigue perception and are more absent from work due to smoking-related diseases. The workplace could represent an important location to promote smoking cessation. Methods This study is a multi-center, controlled trial for smoking cessation counseling at the participants’ workplace, where 656 randomized participants received four sessions of group motivational interviewing or four sessions of very brief advice and were followed up for 52?weeks. Results The Continuous Quit Rate (CQR) was higher for the smoking cessation counseling group than for the very brief advice group during weeks 9 to 12 (17.5% vs. 3.6%) weeks 9 to 24 (13.4% vs. 3.4%) and weeks 9 to 52 (10.3% vs. 3.1%). Conclusions This study demonstrated that motivational interviewing is an efficacious smoking cessation approach for smokers at their workplace. The short-term and long-term cessation rate of the intervention of the smoking cessation counseling group exceeded that of very brief advice.

Keywords
Workplace; smoking cessation; smoking cessation counseling; tobacco addiction; motivational interviewing; reduced risk products

Journal
Journal of Addictive Diseases: Volume 38, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2020
Publication date online07/07/2020
Date accepted by journal07/07/2020
ISSN1055-0887
eISSN1545-0848