Publication | Closed Access
Correspondence programs for smoking cessation and weight control: A comparison of two strategies in the Minnesota Heart Health Program.
56
Citations
22
References
1990
Year
Tobacco ControlCorrespondence ProgramsWeight LossHealth PolicyHealth OutcomeTobacco UseHealth PromotionHealth BehaviorWeight ManagementChronic Disease PreventionHealth PreventionTobacco PolicyPublic HealthCessation Correspondence ProgramsHealth Services ResearchHealth EducationPublic Health InterventionSmoking Cessation
Mailed invitations to participate in weight loss and/or smoking cessation correspondence programs to 31,400 households in a suburban community. Two programs were offered to randomized subsets of households, a 6-month correspondence program costing +5 and the same program for free but requiring a +60 deposit to be refunded based on success in weight loss or smoking cessation. Overall, sign-up included 1,304 people for weight loss and 142 for smoking cessation. The +5 program was about 5 times as popular as the incentive program. Validated weight change after 6 months averaged about 4 lb for the +5 program and 8 lb for the incentive program. Corresponding rates of smoking cessation were about 9% and 20%, respectively. We conclude that correspondence programs for the promotion of weight control and smoking cessation are potentially cost-effective methods for reaching individuals in the community at large, many of whom would not be interested in clinic-based programs. Issues meriting further research include recruitment, especially of smokers, and evaluation of the relative trade-offs in recruitment success versus efficacy of differing treatment approaches.
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