Quitline Programs Tailored for Mental Health: Initial Outcomes and Feasibility.
Monday, March 22, 2021
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Morris CD, Lukowski AV,
Vargas-Belcher RA, Ylioja TE, Nash CM, Bailey LA.
Quitline Programs Tailored
for Mental Health: Initial Outcomes and Feasibility.
Am J Prev Med. 2021 Mar;60(3 Suppl 2):S163-S171. doi:
10.1016/j.amepre.2020.02.025. PMID: 33663704.
Introduction.
The general efficacy of quitlines has been widely demonstrated, but uncertainty
exists regarding how quitlines might best intervene for persons with mental
health conditions. A total of 1 in 5 people in the U.S. has a diagnosable
psychiatric disorder. These individuals smoke at 2‒4 times the rate of smoking
among those without a mental health condition and face high rates of related
death and disability. About half of quitline callers self-report a mental
health condition, but until recently, quitline protocols tailored to these
smokers did not exist.
Methods. This
paper provides initial results for tailored mental health programs from the
largest quitline providers in the U.S., Optum and National Jewish Health. From
2017 to 2018, cohorts of callers with a mental health condition who enrolled in
tailored programs were compared with cohorts with a mental health condition who
received standard care. Both mental health programs offered participants
additional calls, longer duration of combination nicotine-replacement therapy,
and attention to mental health issues. Analyses were conducted in 2018-2019.
Results.
Findings suggest that callers with a mental health condition benefit from both
standard care and tailored mental health services. Tailored programming did
well in engaging people with mental health conditions. At the same time, there
were no significant differences in abstinence rates when comparing mental
health programs with standard care. Mental health cohorts did receive
significantly greater service durations, more counseling calls, and longer
nicotine-replacement therapy duration.
Conclusions.
Tailored mental health quitline programs present a promising framework for
testing the services that address psychiatric symptoms as well as other
frequent population characteristics such as chronic illness. Implications for increasing
reach to the often underserved population with a mental health condition are
discussed.
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