Abstract

BackgroundSmoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States, but evidence-based smoking cessation therapy is underutilized. Financial incentive strategies represent an innovative approach for increasing the use of counseling and pharmacotherapy. If effective, they could supplement or supplant resource-intensive policy options, particularly in populations for whom smoking has substantial societal costs. FIESTA (Financial IncEntives for Smoking TreAtment) will randomize hospitalized smokers to receive usual smoking cessation care alone or usual smoking care augmented with financial incentives. We aim to compare the impact of these two strategies on 1) smoking abstinence, 2) use of counseling and nicotine replacement therapy, and 3) quality of life of participants. We also will evaluate the short-term and long-term return on the investment of incentives. The FIESTA Oral Microbiome Substudy will compare the oral microbiome of smokers and nonsmokers to longitudinally assess whether smoking cessation changes oral microbiome composition.MethodsWe will enroll 182 inpatient participants from the Manhattan campus of the Veterans Affairs New York Harbor Healthcare System. All participants receive enhanced usual care, including screening for tobacco use, counseling while hospitalized, access to nicotine replacement therapy, and referral to a state Quitline. Patients in the financial incentive arm receive enhanced usual care and up to $550 for participating in the New York Smoker’s Quitline, using nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), and achieving biochemically confirmed smoking cessation at 2 months and 6 months. In the microbiome substudy, we enroll nonsmoking control participants matched to each recruited smoker’s hospital ward, sex, age, diabetes status, and antibiotic use. After discharge, participants are asked to complete periodic phone interviews at 2 weeks, 2 months, 6 months, and 12 months and provide expired carbon monoxide and saliva samples at 2 months, 6 months, and 12 months for cotinine testing and oral microbiome analysis.DiscussionThe incentive interventions of FIESTA may benefit hospitalized smokers, an objective made all the more critical because smoking rates among hospitalized patients are higher than those in the general population. Moreover, the focus of FIESTA on evidence-based therapy and bioconfirmed smoking cessation can help guide policy efforts to reduce smoking-related healthcare costs in populations with high rates of tobacco use and costly illnesses.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02506829. Registered on 1 July 2014.

Highlights

  • Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States, but evidence-based smoking cessation therapy is underutilized

  • The primary objective of the Financial IncEntives for Smoking TreAtment (FIESTA) trial is to compare the effects of two approaches for smoking cessation—financial incentives plus enhanced usual care versus enhanced usual care alone—on smoking abstinence, use of evidenced-based therapy, and quality of life

  • We hypothesize that participants in the financial incentives arm will experience higher rates of smoking cessation, improved quality of life, and lower rates of financial distress, and that these gains will be associated with a favorable return on investment

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Summary

Introduction

Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States, but evidence-based smoking cessation therapy is underutilized. Financial incentive strategies represent an innovative approach for increasing the use of counseling and pharmacotherapy. If effective, they could supplement or supplant resource-intensive policy options, in populations for whom smoking has substantial societal costs. Financial incentives for smoking cessation may be an effective strategy for increasing the use of evidence-based cessation therapy among hospitalized patients [7,8,9,10]. Financial incentive programs could supplement or supplant other policy options for smoking cessation, in populations for whom smoking has substantial societal costs. The effectiveness of financial incentives for increasing smoking cessation among hospitalized patients is unknown

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