Abstract
Relapse to tobacco smoking for pregnant women who quit is a major public health problem. Evidence-based approaches to intervention are urgently required. This study aimed to develop an intervention to be integrated into existing healthcare. A mixed methods approach included a theory-driven systematic review identifying promising behaviour change techniques for targeting smoking relapse prevention, and qualitative focus groups and interviews with women (ex-smokers who had remained quit and those who had relapsed), their partners and healthcare professionals (N = 74). A final stage recruited ten women to refine and initially test a prototype intervention. Our qualitative analysis suggests a lack, but need for, relapse prevention support. This should be initiated by a trusted ‘credible source’. For many women this would be a midwife or a health visitor. Support needs to be tailored to individual needs, including positive praise/reward, novel digital and electronic support and partner or social support. Advice and support to use e cigarettes or nicotine replacement therapy for relapse prevention was important for some women, but others remained cautious. The resulting prototype complex intervention includes face-to-face support reiterated throughout the postpartum period, tailored digital and self-help support and novel elements such as gifts and nicotine replacement therapy (NRT).
Highlights
Relapse to tobacco smoking following a quit attempt is a serious problem, but is often overlooked and support is under resourced
Phase 1: A systematic review of behaviour change techniques included in published postpartum relapse prevention interventions
Recruitment adverts were used in stop smoking services, in health visitor clinics attended by postpartum women, at secondary care pregnancy scanning clinics and at children’s centres in one county of the UK
Summary
Relapse to tobacco smoking following a quit attempt is a serious problem, but is often overlooked and support is under resourced. Service delivery in the UK is incentivised to achieve ‘4-week quits’, but patients are not routinely followed up beyond 12 weeks, those who relapse to smoking are ‘lost’ to the healthcare system and do not receive follow up support. For women who quit smoking during pregnancy, relapse is a particular concern. Relapse rates in this population are much higher. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 1968; doi:10.3390/ijerph16111968 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph
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