Study finds Kiwis smoke less after TXT
Media Release
Study finds Kiwis smoke less after TXT
AUCKLAND, 1 June 2005: A world-first University of Auckland study has achieved marked success in using text messaging to help young smokers quit cigarettes, a leading journal reported today.
Quit rates at six weeks of young smokers receiving active text support on STOMP, or the Stop Smoking with Mobile Phones Trial, were double those in a control group, the international journal Tobacco Control reported.
The trial was developed and run by the Clinical Trials Research Unit (CTRU) at The University of Auckland, to target young smokers who have the highest smoking rates but are least likely to enrol in existing programmes.
Dr Anthony Rodgers, Director of the CTRU, said the approach had real promise in helping young adults kick the habit, and harnessing the global boom in texting could be a new weapon to combat a similarly large escalation in youth smoking.
“This is a very encouraging result. We want to develop the concept further but this trial confirms that a text-based approach has the potential to be a powerful resource in reaching and helping young smokers,” Dr Rodgers said.
Vodafone, who were key partners in the trial, welcomed the results as very exciting and said they looked forward to continuing to support the CTRU as the approach is further developed.
Vodafone New Zealand’s Health Sector Manager, Dr Malcolm Miller, said it was great to see a truly creative approach developed in New Zealand show such strong results.
“We are very happy to be involved in such an imaginative initiative. Vodafone is committed to helping STOMP press on towards being able to eventually roll out a new service that can benefit so many people,” Dr Miller said.
"We view STOMP as just one of the first applications off the rank to use advances in mobile technology to help individuals become experts in managing their wellness. Some of the other applications we are looking at include e.fitness, e.nutrition, and diabetes and cardiovascular intervention programs."
The development was supported by Auckland UniServices Limited, the commercialisation company of the University, and it was conducted with the help of The National Heart Foundation of New Zealand, The Cancer Society of New Zealand, Vodafone and Alcatel.
The Ministry of Health has said it will support the project and has committed to working with the CTRU and providers of mobile phone services on ways to make the development more widely available to young people.
1705 young smokers from around New Zealand (who all wanted to quit) enrolled in STOMP. Half of them were in an “active” group and received intensive text intervention leading up to an agreed quit date and one month of free texting.
This included regular personalised text messages that encouraged them to give up smoking or provided distraction at the key moment when tempted to light up.
“There are several ways we think it worked,” said Dr Rodgers. “Free texting acted like “chewing gum for the fingers” and helped with distraction as people texted friends and family. We sent personalised texts on things like coping with urges to smoke, avoiding weight gain, and just plain general interest stuff on sports, music and fashion.
“Using text crave, participants could “pull” a message of support. Text polls and quizzes added further distraction. A lot of people picked up on text buddies too, with people who were due to quit around the same day helping each other out.”
Typical messages of support were: “Who else r u giving up smoking 4? Write down 4 people who will get a kick outta u kicking butt. Your mum, dad, m8s?”
Dr Rodgers said the treatment effect was consistent in participants of different ages, sex, income level or geographic location – it could be particularly effective in helping young Maori who have been not been able to be reached via traditional smoking cessation programmes.
Co-authors of the report, Dr Dale Bramley and Dr Tania Riddell from the School of Population Health at the University, helped develop message content that was of particular relevance to Maori.
“Being able to tailor the programme to suit the needs of individuals was the key to its success amongst Maori participants,” said Dr Bramley. “We produced a number of messages on topics such as Te Reo, Maori legends and Maori traditions.”
Quit rates remained high at six months, but Dr Rodgers said further study was needed to more closely quantify progress, extend the range of follow up testing and establish how success compared with other interventions over the longer term.
Future studies would also look at the use of newer multimedia phones which offer further opportunity for providing quit information and distraction.
There are over a billion mobile phone users globally, with over 70 million text messages sent daily in the United Kingdom. Dr Rodgers said that China now consumed one third of the world’s cigarettes and already had more than 250 million mobile phone users with more than five million new subscribers each month.
Ends
The Clinical
Trials Research Unit
The Clinical Trials Research Unit
(CTRU) is a research unit within the Faculty of Medical and
Health Sciences at The University of Auckland. The unit
conducts research programmes investigating the causes,
prevention and treatment of cardiovascular disease and other
major health problems. Since its inception in 1989, the CRTU
has coordinated clinical trials involving tens of thousands
of people in Australasia, Asia and Europe. The CTRU employs
a multi-disciplinary group of more than 50 health research
workers including epidemiologists, statisticians, study
managers, data managers, computer programmers and
administrative support staff. For more information please
visit HYPERLINK "http://www.ctru.auckland.ac.nz"
www.ctru.auckland.ac.nz
Auckland UniServices
Limited
Auckland UniServices Limited is a wholly owned
company of The University of Auckland. Established in 1988,
UniServices manages all the University's commercial research
and consultancy partnerships, forms new business ventures
based on University research and owns and develops the
University's intellectual property estate.
Our mission is to apply the research and expertise of the University to client needs and business opportunities, enabling organisations based on new knowledge to grow, expand the University's research capability and benefit the broader community. For more information visit HYPERLINK "http://www.uniservices.co.nz" www.uniservices.co.nz
The
National Heart Foundation of New Zealand
The Heart
Foundation funds about $2 million dollars worth of research
annually to increase knowledge about the causes, prevention
and treatment of heart and circulatory diseases.
The Heart Foundation is a non-profit, non-government organisation that aims to promote good health for all New Zealanders and to reduce the suffering and early loss of life from heart disease.
Vodafone
Vodafone New Zealand Ltd is part of
Vodafone Group Plc, the world’s largest mobile community,
with more than 151.8 million proportionate customers
worldwide. The company has equity interests in 26 countries
over five continents and Partner Networks in a further 13
countries.
As at December 2004 Vodafone New Zealand has more than 1.8 million customers on its fully digital network providing coverage to 97 percent of the population. For further information visit HYPERLINK "http://www.vodafone.co.nz" www.vodafone.co.nz
Alcatel
The Alcatel Group designs,
develops and builds innovative and competitive
communications networks, enabling carriers, service
providers and enterprises to deliver any type of content,
such as voice, data and multimedia, to any type of consumer,
anywhere in the world. Relying on its leading and
comprehensive products and solutions portfolio, stretching
from end-to-end optical infrastructures, fixed and mobile
networks to broadband access, Alcatel’s customers can focus
on optimising their service offerings and revenue streams.
With sales of EURO 25 billion in 2001 and 99,000 employees,
Alcatel operates in more than 130 countries. For more
information visit HYPERLINK "http://www.alcatel.com"
www.alcatel.com