Contingency Management for Veteran Smokers Undergoing Major Elective Surgery
University of California, San Francisco
Summary
The goal of this study is to design and test the first mobile contingency management (CM) smoking cessation intervention for military Veterans undergoing major elective surgery. Smoking is the leading risk factor for postoperative complications and is associated with longer hospital stays, reoperations, and 30-day mortality. Smoking rates among patients undergoing major elective surgery are high, 22.3-43.0%. It is imperative to identify efficacious, strategically timed smoking cessation interventions for surgery patients. CM incentivizes smoking cessation through positive reinforcement (rewards) when bioverified abstinence is achieved. To ensure feasibility, CM must be tailored to the clinical context. CM for smoking cessation has never been delivered before and after major surgery, nor has mobile CM bioverification been trialed perioperatively. The investigators will develop and test a tailored mobile smoking cessation CM protocol for Veterans undergoing major elective surgery.
Description
Major elective surgery is common among Veterans and smoking is the most significant modifiable risk factor for perioperative morbidity and mortality. Major elective surgeries, including general, thoracic, vascular, urologic, spinal, orthopedic, and other surgeries, are common in the Veterans Affairs (VA) Healthcare System, with over 600,000 surgical procedures occurring annually across the VA. Reducing complications and death after major elective surgery is a top priority, both for Veterans and the general population. Smoking at the time of surgery is the single greatest risk factor for compli…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * English-speaking; * Veteran enrolled in healthcare at SFVAHCS; * Veteran scheduled for major elective surgery within the next 6 months (including but not limited to: general, spinal, thoracic, vascular, urological, gynecological, orthopedic, gender affirming). Veterans, who are followed at SFVAHCS by Primary Care and are referred to outside institutions for major surgery (e.g., gynecological or gender-affirming surgeries) are also eligible to participate; * Current (past 30 days) cigarette smoking a minimum of 1 cigarette per day (average), assessed by Timeline Followbac…
Interventions
- BehavioralContingency Management (CM)
The participants will receive and be trained to use a CO monitor and iCO app to upload videos to verify smoking abstinence at a minimum of once per day, 5 times per week, over 5 weeks. Financial incentives will be provided at weekly visits contingent on tobacco abstinence verified through remote CO monitoring. They will receive clinician feedback at the time of each CO reading, following the established VA CM protocol developed in the earlier phase of the project. Each CO reading during the weeks 2-5 will also be accompanied with a brief (5-minute) telephone or video feedback CM counseling session from the study clinician.
- BehavioralTreatment as Usual (TAU)
Participants assigned to TAU will receive usual care at San Francisco VA Health Care System (SFVAHCS), i.e., referral to Tobacco Cessation Clinic and the VA Telequit Quitline. The SFVAHCS Tobacco Cessation Clinic is a consult service that calls patients proactively 3 times to offer 1:1 behavioral counseling for smoking cessation. VA Telequit is a national toll-free number available to Veterans that allows them to speak with a smoking cessation counselor for up to 5 sessions per NCI Quitline guidelines. The smoker initiates the first call, and subsequent calls will be proactively made by Quitline staff.
Location
- San Francisco VA Health Care SystemSan Francisco, California