Background People with a severe and persistent mental illness are far more likely to smoke than others. Importantly, a large portion of them would like to quit. Despite this desire, they are less likely to make quit attempts and succeed. Objective This study used an RCT to test an intervention designed to increase engagement in cessation treatment, quit attempts, and quitting in smokers who did not want to quit in the next 30 days. It also compared these smokers with those who were motivated to quit in the next 30 days. Methods Participants (N=222), smokers with significant mental illness receiving intensive outpatient care from Community Support Programs in Wisconsin who were not interested in quitting in the next 30 days, were randomly assigned to either an intervention group or an attention control group. The intervention, administered during four weekly sessions, included a motivational element, components designed to prepare the smoker for a quit attempt, and pre-quit nicotine patch. Additionally, 48 smokers motivated to quit in the next 30 days served as a comparison group. Results Compared to control participants, smokers receiving the intervention were more likely to be abstinent (7 day point prevalence) at the three month follow-up (biochemically verified, intent to treat, 8.5% vs. 1.0%, respectively, p=.01). They were also more likely to accept four more quitting preparation sessions (intent to treat, 50.8% vs 29.2%, respectively p<.001) but were not more likely to call a telephone tobacco quit line (intent to treat, 9.3% vs. 5.8%, respectively p=.45). Conclusion/Importance Brief motivational interventions increased engagement in cessation treatment and abstinence among smokers with signification mental illness.
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