Interactive Technology Helps Smokers Quit
Study Shows Web- And Computer-Based Smoking Cessation Programs Bolster Quitters' Resolve
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This 2007 file photo shows a smoker, participating in a University of Nebraska Medical Center program, using a PDA programmed with smoking cessation tools that help quitters deal with withdrawal symptoms. A new study says interactive programs on computers or the Internet can help smoking who quit stay away from cigarettes. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)
Web- and computer-based smoking-cessation programs, including some that are interactive, seem to be effective, shows a study in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
Such methods are cost-effective alternatives to telephone hotlines or counseling services, study researcher Joel Moskowitz, PhD, tells WebMD.
Moskowitz is director of the Center for Family and Community Health at the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health.
These Web-based programs generally help users evaluate the benefits of quitting tobacco, telling them "how much money you'll save, how much longer you'll live," he says. "They set up rewards for smokers. Some are discussion forums, like blogs. On some you can post pictures. Some have hundreds of thousands of people coming in and going out.
"Some have 'quit meters' you can download to your desktop," Moskowitz says. "They help you track how long you've quit. It's important to have immediate reinforcement, to make a public commitment."
The researchers analyzed pooled data from 22 trials in which smokers enrolled in Web- or computer-based smoking-cessation programs, and smokers who quit without them. The trials had data on almost 30,000 participants, including 16,050 who were randomly assigned to a Web- or computer-based program. The trials were conducted in the U.S., U.K., Australia, Germany, and Switzerland.
Although cessation rates at three months were similar between the two groups, the researchers found that 9.9% managed to stay away from smoking for a year after the Web- or computer-based cessation programs, compared to 5.7% who were not enrolled in a computer- or Web-based program.
Data spanned 19 years and included three to 12 months' worth of follow-up information.
"Currently, Web- and computer-based smoking-cessation programs are not commonly recommended because evidence of their effectiveness has been inconsistent," study researcher Seung-Kwon Myung, MD, staff physician at the Smoking Cessation Clinic at the National Cancer Center in South Korea, says in a news release. "But our review of the evidence to date suggests that Web and computer-based programs have a legitimate place in tobacco dependence treatment options."
Myung, who conducted research while a visiting scholar at Berkeley, says computer-based programs won't necessarily supplant existing treatment options, such as medications or counseling. But they could help people who can't afford to pay for treatment or who are concerned about the stigma associated with seeking treatment.
Moskowitz tells WebMD that many smokers may prefer computer or Web systems over face-to-face or person-to-person phone counseling sessions to avoid embarrassment.
"Some of these programs give immediate reinforcement, and that's important," Moskowitz says. And computer programs can easily be translated into many languages, which means they could benefit a diverse group of people.
By Bill Hendrick
Reviewed by Louise Chang
© 2009 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved.
- How about some links to the sites you use? I've been trying with limited success to quit, and I am getting desperate!
- Reply to this comment
- "Currently, Web- and computer-based smoking-cessation programs are not commonly recommended because evidence of their effectiveness has been inconsistent," study researcher Seung-Kwon Myung, MD, staff physician at the Smoking Cessation Clinic at the National Cancer Center in South Korea, says in a news release.
I quit smoking four and one-half years ago! I had tried everything to quit smoking after my mother died from the complications of emphysema/COPD. I tried the patch, hypnosis, nicotine gum, cold turkey....numerous times. I was a chain smoker, smoked a minimum of two packs a day for over 30 years. And if I was in a situation where smoking was not allowed, I would simply chew on a piece of nicotine gum.
What finally worked for me? Web- and computer-based smoking-cessation programs!! Once I made my mind up to quit, I downloaded a form from one of the five web sites that I visited daily, and made a list of why I wanted to quit smokingI I posted that list at my computer station, on my refrigerator, and in my bathroom!
If I could quit smoking, I am convinced ANYONE can quit! I was horribly addicted to nicotine. I was not addicted to any oral habits, etc. It was solely the nicotine!
By faithfully visiting those five web sites that I choose every day, I was finally able to quit smoking! It was like a miracle, and so unbelievably easy for me this time. I feel like I was released from a prison of nicotine addiction, and I will never go back there. I have a new lease on life.....and I wish I could help everyone else who wishes to quit.
The author of this article should pursue this subject in greater depth. There is a lot of substance to be discovered, I am convinced! - Reply to this comment
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