Skip to main content

Abstract

Objective:

Adults with serious mental illness have high rates of tobacco use disorder and underuse pharmacotherapy for tobacco cessation. In a previous randomized controlled trial, participants receiving community health worker (CHW) support and education for their primary care providers (PCPs) had higher tobacco abstinence rates at 2 years, partly because of increased initiation of tobacco-cessation pharmacotherapy. The authors aimed to determine the association between CHW-participant engagement and tobacco abstinence outcomes.

Methods:

The authors conducted a secondary, mixed-methods analysis of 196 participants in the trial’s intervention arm. Effects of the number and duration of CHW visits, number of smoking-cessation group sessions attended, and number of CHW-attended PCP visits on initiation of tobacco-cessation pharmacotherapy and tobacco abstinence were modeled via logistic regression. Interviews with 12 CHWs, 17 patient participants, and 17 PCPs were analyzed thematically.

Results:

Year 2 tobacco abstinence was significantly associated with CHW visit number (OR=1.85, 95% CI=1.29–2.66), visit duration (OR=1.51, 95% CI=1.00–2.28), and number of group sessions attended (OR=1.85, 95% CI=1.33–2.58); effects on pharmacotherapy initiation were similar. One to three CHW visits per month across 2 years were optimal for achieving abstinence. Interviews identified CHW-patient engagement facilitators (i.e., trust, goal accountability, skills reinforcement, assistance in overcoming barriers to treatment access, and adherence). Training and supervision facilitated CHW effectiveness; barriers included PCPs’ and care teams’ limited understanding of the CHW role.

Conclusions:

Greater CHW-participant engagement, within feasible dose ranges, was associated with tobacco abstinence among adults with serious mental illness. Implementation of CHW interventions may benefit from further CHW training and integration within clinical teams.

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

Supplementary Material

File (appi.ps.20240044.ds001.pdf)

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services

History

Received: 26 January 2024
Revision received: 16 April 2024
Revision received: 17 May 2024
Accepted: 22 May 2024
Published online: 9 August 2024

Keywords

  1. Schizophrenia
  2. Smoking
  3. Community mental health services
  4. Tobacco cessation
  5. Behavioral medicine

Authors

Details

Cheryl Y. S. Foo, Ph.D. [email protected]
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Kevin Potter, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Lindsay Nielsen, B.A.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Aarushi Rohila, B.A.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Melissa Culhane Maravic, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Kristina Schnitzer, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Gladys N. Pachas, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Douglas E. Levy, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Sally Reyering, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Anne N. Thorndike, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
Corinne Cather, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).
A. Eden Evins, M.D., M.P.H.
Department of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Nielsen, Rohila, Maravic, Schnitzer, Pachas, Cather, Evins), Mongan Institute Health Policy Research Center (Levy), and Division of General Internal Medicine (Thorndike), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Departments of Psychiatry (Foo, Potter, Pachas, Cather, Evins) and Medicine (Levy, Thorndike), Harvard Medical School, Boston; Bay Cove Human Services, Boston (Reyering).

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Foo ([email protected]).
This study was presented in part at the Massachusetts General Hospital Annual Public and Community Psychiatry Symposium, held virtually March 15, 2023, and at the Massachusetts General Hospital Clinical Research Day, held virtually October 10, 2023.

Author Contributions

Drs. Thorndike, Cather, and Evins contributed equally as senior authors.

Competing Interests

Drs. Cather and Evins report serving as consultants for Charles River Analytics. The other authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Funding Information

This work was funded by award 1504-30472 (principal investigator, Dr. Evins, and coprincipal investigator, Dr. Reyering) from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) Large Pragmatic Trial. The work of Drs. Foo and Cather in this study was supported by funding from the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health to the Massachusetts General Hospital Center of Excellence for Psychosocial and Systemic Research. Dr. Thorndike’s work on this study was supported in part by NIH grant K24 HL163073.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Export Citations

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

For more information or tips please see 'Downloading to a citation manager' in the Help menu.

Format
Citation style
Style
Copy to clipboard

There are no citations for this item

View Options

Get Access

Login options

Already a subscriber? Access your subscription through your login credentials or your institution for full access to this article.

Personal login Institutional Login Open Athens login
Purchase Options

Purchase this article to access the full text.

PPV Articles - Psychiatric Services

PPV Articles - Psychiatric Services

Not a subscriber?

Subscribe Now / Learn More

PsychiatryOnline subscription options offer access to the DSM-5-TR® library, books, journals, CME, and patient resources. This all-in-one virtual library provides psychiatrists and mental health professionals with key resources for diagnosis, treatment, research, and professional development.

Need more help? PsychiatryOnline Customer Service may be reached by emailing [email protected] or by calling 800-368-5777 (in the U.S.) or 703-907-7322 (outside the U.S.).

View options

PDF/ePub

View PDF/ePub

Full Text

View Full Text

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Share article link

Share