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Expectations and Preferences for Digital Cessation Treatment: Multimethods Study Among Older Adults Who Smoke Cigarettes

Expectations and Preferences for Digital Cessation Treatment: Multimethods Study Among Older Adults Who Smoke Cigarettes

To address these age-related tobacco disparities, there is a critical need to promote the use of evidence-based cessation treatments in this age group. More than half of older adults who smoke cigarettes want to quit [13], but only about a third (37%) use an evidence-based treatment when making a quit attempt [14]. However, when older adults do engage in evidence-based treatment, they experience comparable (and sometimes higher) quit rates compared to their younger counterparts [15].

Margaret C Fahey, Mathew J Carpenter, Riley O'Neal, Kinsey Pebley, Melissa R Schick, Emily Ware, Benjamin A Toll, Jennifer Dahne

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e52919

A Digital Smoking Cessation Program for Heavy Drinkers: Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

A Digital Smoking Cessation Program for Heavy Drinkers: Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Toll et al [15] incorporated a brief intervention to reduce alcohol use in HD smokers calling a state quitline, which resulted in significantly higher rates of smoking abstinence at 7 months compared with standard quitline counseling, with a trend toward reduced HD.

Christopher W Kahler, Amy M Cohn, Catherine Costantino, Benjamin A Toll, Nichea S Spillane, Amanda L Graham

JMIR Form Res 2020;4(6):e7570

Development of an Electronic Health Record Self-Referral Tool for Lung Cancer Screening: One-Group Posttest Study

Development of an Electronic Health Record Self-Referral Tool for Lung Cancer Screening: One-Group Posttest Study

High-quality evidence demonstrates a 20%-35% reduction in lung cancer mortality by screening those at high risk of lung cancer based on age and smoking history [4,5]. Based on this, the US Preventative Services Task Force has given a grade B recommendation in favor of screening with low-dose computed tomography for individuals aged 50 to 80 years who currently smoke or have quit within the past 15 years with a minimum 20-pack-year smoking following a shared decision-making visit [1,6].

Garrett S Stang, Nichole T Tanner, Ashley Hatch, Jakarri Godbolt, Benjamin A Toll, Alana M Rojewski

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e53159

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