Are financial incentives more effective than health campaigns to quit smoking? A community-randomised smoking cessation trial in Denmark

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Dokumenter

  • Charlotta Pisinger
  • Cecilie Goltermann Toxværd
  • Mette Rasmussen

The aim of this community-randomised smoking cessation (SC) trial was to investigate both recruitment and SC-rates in three municipalities offering financial incentives (FIM) to smokers who stop smoking when attending a municipal SC-program and compare these with three municipalities investing in a campaign (CAM) that should encourage smokers to use the SC-program. Furthermore, in a non-randomised matched control design we investigated whether there was a difference in recruitment and SC-rates in the three FIM and the three CAM, comparing each with three matched control municipalities (MCM). Each municipality received approx. $16,000. The FIM rewarded persons who were abstinent when attending the municipal SC-program. The CAM spent the money on a campaign recruiting smokers to the SC-program. Two of three FIM were only partly active in recruiting smokers in the intervention year 2018. An intention-to-treat (ITT) approach was used in analyses. Complete case analyses and multiple imputation were used to address loss to follow-up. No difference in recruitment was found between the CAM and the FIM (p = 0.954), in adjusted analyses. In ITT analyses, FIM achieved significantly higher odds of validated abstinence from smoking at one-year follow-up (OR (95%CI): 1.63(1.1–2.4)), but not of self-reported continuous abstinence after six months than CAM. Compared with no intervention, campaigns increased the recruitment of smokers to the SC-program while financial incentives increased six months abstinence rates. In a randomised trial, no difference was demonstrated in the effect of financial incentives and campaigns to recruit smokers to a SC-program and financial incentives seemed superior to help smokers staying smoke-free for a year. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.Gov ID: NCT03849092.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer106865
TidsskriftPreventive Medicine
Vol/bind154
ISSN0091-7435
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We thank the Tryg Foundation (Trygfonden), Denmark (an independent charity that funds research and development related to health and social issues; grant 119404) for funding of the study. Furthermore, the Danish Heart Foundation funded CP's professorship during work on this paper. They were not involved in any step of this study and will first be presented with the results of the study when it is published.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s)

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