BackgroundYoung adult smokers are a challenging group to engage in smoking cessation interventions. With wide reach and engagement among users, Facebook offers opportunity to engage young people in socially supportive communities for quitting smoking and sustaining abstinence.ObjectiveWe developed and tested initial efficacy, engagement, and acceptability of the Tobacco Status Project, a smoking cessation intervention for young adults delivered within Facebook.MethodsThe intervention was based on the US Public Health Service Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Transtheoretical Model and enrolled participants into study-run 3-month secret Facebook groups matched on readiness to quit smoking. Cigarette smokers (N=79) aged 18-25, who used Fac...
Significance Given limited research on young-adult tobacco cessation interventions, we examined pref...
Background: Young adults have high rates of tobacco use compared to other subpopulations, yet there ...
© 2015 Ramo et al.Background: Tobacco use remains the leading cause of premature morbidity and morta...
Background: Young adult smokers are a challenging group to engage in smoking cessation interventions...
BACKGROUND:Tobacco use and heavy episodic drinking (HED) commonly co-occur in young adults. We devel...
IntroductionTobacco and alcohol often are used simultaneously by young adults, and their co-use is a...
Abstract Background Tobacco use and heavy episodic drinking (HED) commonly co-occur in young adults....
AbstractFurther understanding is needed of the functionalities and efficiency of social media for he...
BackgroundCo-occurrence of tobacco use and heavy episodic drinking (HED; 5+ drinks for men and 4+ dr...
Background: Facebook is the most popular social network site, with over 1 billion users globally. Th...
INTRODUCTION: While promising evidence from trials of social-media-based stop smoking support inform...
This study tested engagement in and acceptability of a digital smoking cessation intervention design...
Introduction: While promising evidence from trials of social-media-based stop smoking support inform...
Background: Young adults have high rates of tobacco use compared to other subpopulations, yet there ...
INTRODUCTION: This trial investigated whether a Facebook smoking cessation intervention culturally t...
Significance Given limited research on young-adult tobacco cessation interventions, we examined pref...
Background: Young adults have high rates of tobacco use compared to other subpopulations, yet there ...
© 2015 Ramo et al.Background: Tobacco use remains the leading cause of premature morbidity and morta...
Background: Young adult smokers are a challenging group to engage in smoking cessation interventions...
BACKGROUND:Tobacco use and heavy episodic drinking (HED) commonly co-occur in young adults. We devel...
IntroductionTobacco and alcohol often are used simultaneously by young adults, and their co-use is a...
Abstract Background Tobacco use and heavy episodic drinking (HED) commonly co-occur in young adults....
AbstractFurther understanding is needed of the functionalities and efficiency of social media for he...
BackgroundCo-occurrence of tobacco use and heavy episodic drinking (HED; 5+ drinks for men and 4+ dr...
Background: Facebook is the most popular social network site, with over 1 billion users globally. Th...
INTRODUCTION: While promising evidence from trials of social-media-based stop smoking support inform...
This study tested engagement in and acceptability of a digital smoking cessation intervention design...
Introduction: While promising evidence from trials of social-media-based stop smoking support inform...
Background: Young adults have high rates of tobacco use compared to other subpopulations, yet there ...
INTRODUCTION: This trial investigated whether a Facebook smoking cessation intervention culturally t...
Significance Given limited research on young-adult tobacco cessation interventions, we examined pref...
Background: Young adults have high rates of tobacco use compared to other subpopulations, yet there ...
© 2015 Ramo et al.Background: Tobacco use remains the leading cause of premature morbidity and morta...