Program uptake of a parent-tailored telephone smoking cessation counselling: An examination of recruitment approaches

Publication date

2021

Authors

Scheffers-Van Schayck, TessaISNI 0000000492528098
Wetter, David W.
Otten, Roy
Engels, Rutger C.M.E.
Kleinjan, MarloesISNI 000000039442560X

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Introduction Recently, a Dutch proactive parent-tailored telephone smoking cessation counselling program, Smoke-free Parents (SFP), was demonstrated to be effective in helping parents to quit smoking. This study aimed to examine the program’s uptake and the costs of two recruitment approaches (i.e. healthcare vs mass media) for SFP. In addition, parent’s barriers to participating in SFP and the characteristics of participating parents were assessed. Methods As part of an effectiveness-implementation hybrid trial, 402 smoking parents were recruited via healthcare settings and mass media for an informal, proactive, and free phone call with a smoking cessation counsellor about SFP (the Netherlands, September 2016 – September 2018). Parents were asked whether they wanted to participate in SFP. If parents refused, reasons for decline and additional information (e.g. educational level) were collected. Results Results revealed that 26.4% of the recruited parents participated in SFP. Although the program uptake of parents recruited via mass media was slightly, but not significantly, higher than via healthcare (27.3% vs 26.8%, p=0.92), the healthcare approach resulted in lower costs per participant (€99.62 vs €205.72). Smoking cessation counsellors were unable to reach almost one-third (32.7%) of the parents after they had agreed to be called about SFP. Conclusions The present study showed that more than a quarter of all recruited parents participated in SFP and that the mass media approach and healthcare approach can be used to recruit parents for SFP. To increase the number of parents participating in SFP, it is important to overcome the identified barriers that prevent parents from participating.

Keywords

barriers, parents, program uptake, recruitment, smoking cessation, telephone counselling, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Epidemiology, Health(social science), Health Professions (miscellaneous), SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Schayck, T S V, Wetter, D W, Otten, R, Engels, R C M E & Kleinjan, M 2021, 'Program uptake of a parent-tailored telephone smoking cessation counselling : An examination of recruitment approaches', Tobacco Prevention and Cessation, vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.18332/tpc/133019