Academics

Smoking Study: Financial Incentives May Double Quit Rates

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Financial incentives may help socioeconomically disadvantaged smokers put down the cigarette, according to a recent study.

Researchers from the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) found that offering small financial incentives doubles smoking cessation rates among socioeconomically disadvantaged smokers.

Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Thanks to public health efforts, smoking rates have declined to 18 percent among American adults. However, nearly 30 percent of people living in poverty continue to smoke. Smoking is becoming increasingly concentrated in socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, according to the study authors.

 "We wanted to investigate how small and potentially cost-effective financial incentives might help safety net hospital patients quit smoking," Darla Kendzor, assistant professor in the Division of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences at the UTHealth School of Public Health Dallas Regional Campus, said in a statement. Safety net hospitals provide a significant level of care to low-income, uninsured and vulnerable populations.

For the study, researchers enrolled Parkland Smoking Cessation Clinic patients in Dallas from 2011 to 2013. Participants were randomly assigned to either usual clinic care or the intervention group.  Usual care included an educational orientation session, weekly support group meetings, physician visits and pharmacological treatment. The intervention group received usual care and small financial incentives for biochemically-verified smoking abstinence.

Specifically, participants in the intervention group had the opportunity to earn $20 in gift cards for abstinence on the quit date, and this amount increased by $5 each week for continued abstinence up to $40. Thus, participants could earn up to $150 in gift cards over four weeks. Progress was monitored for 12 weeks following the quit date.

Abstinence rates were significantly higher for those assigned to the intervention group at all visits following the quit date, with 49 percent remaining abstinent versus 25 percent of usual care participants at four weeks after the quit date. Twelve weeks after the quit date and eight weeks after incentives were discontinued, 33 percent of the financial incentives group were abstinent versus 14 percent in the usual care group.

Participants earned an average of $63 in gift cards for abstinence during the first four weeks after the quit date. The clinic sees about 200 patients a year, so the cost to the clinic is estimated to be about $12,680. In contrast, the average cost of lung cancer treatment ranged from $60,533 to $73,062 per person in 2010, according to research from the National Cancer Institute. The low cost of this cessation program could outweigh health care costs associated with smoking-related illnesses, such as cardiovascular diseases, respiratory diseases and cancer, according to Kendzor.

Participants recruited from the Parkland Smoking Cessation Clinic were extremely socioeconomically disadvantaged. Most had an average household income of less than $12,000 a year. Eighty-five percent were not employed and more than half were uninsured.

"We found that women assigned to the financial incentives intervention had the highest cessation rates, which was surprising because women often have lower cessation rates than men participating in treatment," said Kendzor.

Researchers hope to evaluate the longer-term effects of financial incentives on cessation by following participants for six months or longer. 

The findings are detailed in the American Journal of Public Health.

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