IntroductionPrevious studies found that offering free nicotine patches significantly increases calls to quitlines, although most used pre-post designs and did not directly compare the effects of patches and other incentives. The current study with California Medicaid members used a 2 × 2 design to directly assess the effects of offering free patches and incentives on calls to a quitline. The hypotheses were that offering either would make members more likely to call, and that offering both would increase demand even further.MethodsFlyers were inserted into a mailing sent to 4,268,696 Medicaid households, with one of four offers: (1) free counseling; (2) counseling plus patches; (3) counseling plus a $20 gift card; and (4) counseling plus pa...
Smoking remains the largest preventable contributor to morbidity and mortality, resulting in over 8 ...
Smoking cessation aids (nicotine replacement products and anti-depressant medication) have been prov...
IntroductionMost smokers abstain from smoking during hospitalization but relapse upon discharge. Thi...
IntroductionMost successful trials of financial incentives for smoking cessation have offered large ...
IntroductionPeople who smoke are at increased risk of serious COVID-19-related disease but have had ...
IntroductionLittle is known about how incentives may encourage low income smokers to call for quitli...
Introduction: There is growing evidence that the mailed distribution of free nicotine replacement th...
Nicotine replacement products are commonly used to promote smoking cessation, but alternative and co...
Abstract Background Large-scale distribution efforts ...
Background: Large-scale distribution efforts of free nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) have been do...
AbstractBackgroundHospitalized smokers often quit smoking, voluntarily or involuntarily; most relaps...
Financial incentives have been shown to improve recruitment of low-income smokers into tobacco quitl...
Despite over 50 years of tobacco control efforts, tobacco use remains the leading preventable cause ...
Abstract Background Hospitalized smokers often quit smoking, voluntarily or involuntarily; most rela...
This paper demonstrates the use of willingness to pay to value hypothetical new smoking cessation pr...
Smoking remains the largest preventable contributor to morbidity and mortality, resulting in over 8 ...
Smoking cessation aids (nicotine replacement products and anti-depressant medication) have been prov...
IntroductionMost smokers abstain from smoking during hospitalization but relapse upon discharge. Thi...
IntroductionMost successful trials of financial incentives for smoking cessation have offered large ...
IntroductionPeople who smoke are at increased risk of serious COVID-19-related disease but have had ...
IntroductionLittle is known about how incentives may encourage low income smokers to call for quitli...
Introduction: There is growing evidence that the mailed distribution of free nicotine replacement th...
Nicotine replacement products are commonly used to promote smoking cessation, but alternative and co...
Abstract Background Large-scale distribution efforts ...
Background: Large-scale distribution efforts of free nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) have been do...
AbstractBackgroundHospitalized smokers often quit smoking, voluntarily or involuntarily; most relaps...
Financial incentives have been shown to improve recruitment of low-income smokers into tobacco quitl...
Despite over 50 years of tobacco control efforts, tobacco use remains the leading preventable cause ...
Abstract Background Hospitalized smokers often quit smoking, voluntarily or involuntarily; most rela...
This paper demonstrates the use of willingness to pay to value hypothetical new smoking cessation pr...
Smoking remains the largest preventable contributor to morbidity and mortality, resulting in over 8 ...
Smoking cessation aids (nicotine replacement products and anti-depressant medication) have been prov...
IntroductionMost smokers abstain from smoking during hospitalization but relapse upon discharge. Thi...