Publication | Open Access
Concurrent brief versus intensive smoking intervention during alcohol dependence treatment.
45
Citations
18
References
2007
Year
Tobacco CessationSubstance UseIntensive InterventionMental HealthDrug TreatmentRelapse PreventionHarm ReductionAlcohol Dependent SmokersTobacco ControlNicotineAddiction MedicinePublic HealthPsychiatryHealth PolicyTobacco UseAddiction TreatmentOutcomes ResearchConcurrent BriefRehabilitationAlcohol DependenceSmoking CessationSubstance AbuseAddictionAddiction Health Service ResearchSubstance AddictionGroup CounselingMedicine
Alcohol dependent smokers (N=118) enrolled in an intensive outpatient substance abuse treatment program were randomized to a concurrent brief or intensive smoking cessation intervention. Brief treatment consisted of a 15-min counseling session with 5 min of follow-up. Intensive intervention consisted of three 1-hr counseling sessions plus 8 weeks of nicotine patch therapy. The cigarette abstinence rate, verified by breath carbon monoxide, was significantly higher for the intensive treatment group (27.5%) versus the rate for the brief treatment group (6.6%) at 1 month after the quit date but not at 6 months, when abstinence rates fell to 9.1% for the intensive treatment group and 2.1% for the brief treatment group. Smoking treatment assignment did not significantly impact alcohol outcomes. Although intensive smoking treatment was associated with higher rates of short-term tobacco abstinence, other, perhaps more intensive, smoking interventions are needed to produce lasting smoking cessation in alcohol dependent smokers.
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