A Pilot Study and Ecological Model of Smoking Cues to Inform Mobile Health Strategies for Quitting Among Low-Income Smokers

Author:

Zhou Shuo12ORCID,Levinson Arnold H.12,Zhang Xuhong1,Portz Jennifer D.2,Moore Susan L.12,Gore M. Odette23,Ford Kelsey L.12ORCID,Li Qing4,Bull Sheana12

Affiliation:

1. Colorado School of Public Health, Aurora, CO, USA

2. University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA

3. Denver Health and Hospital Authority, Denver, CO, USA

4. San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA

Abstract

One crucial factor that leads to disparities in smoking cessation between groups with higher and lower socioeconomic status is more prevalent socioenvironmental smoking cues in low-income communities. Little is known about how these cues influence socioeconomically disadvantaged smokers in real-world scenarios and how to design interventions, especially mobile phone–based interventions, to counteract the impacts of various types of smoking cues. We interviewed 15 current smokers living in low-income communities and scanned their neighborhoods to explore smoking-related experiences and identify multilevel cues that may trigger them to smoke. Findings suggest four major types of smoking cues influence low-income smokers—internal, habitual, social, and environmental. We propose an ecological model of smoking cues to inform the design of mobile health (mHealth) interventions for smoking cessation. We suggest that user-triggered strategies will be most useful to address internal cues; server-triggered strategies will be most suitable in changing perceived social norms of smoking and routine smoking activities to address social and habitual cues; and context-triggered strategies will be most effective for counteracting environmental cues. The pros and cons of each approach are discussed regarding their cost-effectiveness, the potential to provide personalized assistance, and scale.

Funder

American Cancer Society

national institutes of health

Denver Health and Hospital Authority

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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