Qualitative Message Development to Motivate Quitting Smoking in Older Adults: Dementia May Motivate Quitting.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Adrienne L Johnson, Sara Doyle, Carey E Gleason, Jessica Cook, Jane Mahoney, Megan E Piper
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Abstract

Compared to younger adults, older adults who smoke cigarettes are half as likely to make a quit attempt, but more likely to maintain abstinence using evidence-based smoking treatments (EBSTs), illustrating the need for motivational messages to promote cessation through EBSTs. It is unclear whether messaging regarding the association between smoking and dementia might motivate older adults to quit. We conducted 90-min semi-structured qualitative interviews and surveys via telephone with 24 U.S. older adults who smoke (ages 50-75) with no cognitive impairment history. Rapid content analysis revealed the most reported health-related concern of aging was dementia/cognitive loss/loss of functioning. However, most participants were unaware of the association between cognitive decline and smoking. Participants had seen previous smoking cessation advertisements, but most did not feel motivated to quit by them. The majority found a message about smoking raising dementia risk and quitting decreasing that risk to be motivational for cessation. Exact message content preference varied, but 2 broad categories arose: hope- and fear-based messages. Most participants stated willingness to use some cessation pharmacotherapy and half were willing to use cessation counseling. Participants preferred messages to come from older adults who were successful quitters. To our knowledge, this was the first study to explore potential motivational messages targeting older adult smokers, including the potential acceptability of a dementia-related message in this context. This work supports patient desire for targeted motivational messages for older adult smokers. Messages highlighting the link between smoking and dementia are perceived to be motivational for this group; future work should compare a hope- to fear-based messages.

开发定性信息以激励老年人戒烟:痴呆症可能会激发戒烟。
与年轻人相比,吸烟的老年人尝试戒烟的几率只有年轻人的一半,但使用循证戒烟疗法(EBSTs)保持戒烟的几率却更高,这说明有必要通过循证戒烟疗法传播促进戒烟的动机信息。目前还不清楚有关吸烟与痴呆症之间关系的信息是否能激励老年人戒烟。我们通过电话对 24 名美国吸烟老年人(50-75 岁)进行了 90 分钟的半结构化定性访谈和调查,这些老年人没有认知障碍病史。快速内容分析表明,报告最多的与老年健康相关的问题是痴呆症/认知功能丧失/功能减退。然而,大多数参与者并不知道认知能力下降与吸烟之间的关系。参与者曾看过戒烟广告,但大多数人并不因此而有戒烟的动力。大多数人认为,关于吸烟会增加痴呆症风险以及戒烟会降低这种风险的信息会激发戒烟动机。参与者对广告内容的具体偏好各不相同,但大致可分为两大类:希望型广告和恐惧型广告。大多数参与者表示愿意使用一些戒烟药物疗法,半数人愿意使用戒烟咨询。参与者更喜欢来自成功戒烟的老年人的信息。据我们所知,这是第一项探索针对老年吸烟者的潜在动机信息的研究,包括在这种情况下与痴呆症相关的信息的潜在可接受性。这项研究支持了患者对针对老年吸烟者的激励信息的需求。强调吸烟与痴呆症之间联系的信息被认为对这一群体具有激励作用;未来的工作应将基于希望的信息与基于恐惧的信息进行比较。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
192
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: INQUIRY is a peer-reviewed open access journal whose msision is to to improve health by sharing research spanning health care, including public health, health services, and health policy.
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