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Title: Nicotine Dependence: Initiation, Cessation and the Process of Change


1
Nicotine Dependence Initiation, Cessation and
the Process of Change
  • Carlo C. DiClemente, Ph.D.
  • University of Maryland Baltimore County
  • Department of Psychology 1000 Hilltop Circle
  • Baltimore, MD 21250
  • E-mail diclemen_at_umbc.edu
  • http//www.umbc.edu/psych/habits
  • www.mdquit.org

2
C. Everett Koop, M.D.
Cigarette smoking is the chief, single avoidable
cause of death in our society and the most
important public health issue of our time.
U.S. Surgeon General, 1981-1989
3
Smoking Prevalence Among U.S. Adults (gt18)
  • YEAR Overall Males Females
  • 1965 42.4 51.9 33.9
  • 1970 37.3 44.1 31.5
  • 1980 33.2 37.6 29.3
  • 1990 25.5 28.4 22.8
  • 1995 24.7 27.0 22.6
  • 2000 23.3 25.7 21.0
  • 2004 20.9 23.4 18.5

MMWR 11.11.05
4
SMOKELESS TOBACCO
  • Smokeless is less prevalent but creates similar
    dependence on nicotine
  • Contains 28 cancer causing agents
  • Estimates are that about 3 of adults are
    smokeless tobacco users (2005 NSDU)
  • Two leading brands are Skoal (28) and Copenhagen
    (22). New one SNUS
  • Different Product Similar Process of Change
    (Severson)

5
51.4
49.7
Men
Women
6
Lung Cancer Incidence California vs. Rest of
U.S. 1988-2003
U.S. minus CA (SEER)
4
California
21!
SEER includes 14 cancer registries from across
the U.S.
American Cancer Society, CA Division and Public
Health Institute, CA Cancer Registry, California
Cancer Facts and Figures 2007, September 2006.
7
The Big Picture - 2004
  • 90.2 million ever smokers (42.4 of pop with gt100
    lifetime cigarettes)
  • 45.6 million (50.6) former smokers
  • 44.5 million people smoking the U.S.
  • 36.1 million smoked every day
  • 14.6 million of these (40.5) stopped smoking for
    one day in past 12 mo trying to quit
  • 8.3 million smoked some days

MMWR 11.11.05
8
Population VS IndividualPerspectives on Cessation
  • Individual Level
  • Successful one year unaided quit rates range from
    3 to 6
  • Many smokers (40-47) attempt to quit
  • Multiple unsuccessful quit attempts the norm
  • High interest in quitting but low uptake of help
  • Population Level
  • Smoking cessation one of the most successful
    health behavior changes in our history
  • Dramatic reduction in of smokers over past 40
    years
  • Over 50 of living ever smokers are quit

9
A Personal Journey
  • The journey into and out of nicotine addiction is
    a personal one marked by
  • Biological, psychological and social risk and
    protective factors
  • Social Influences (peers, media, tobacco
    companies, policies, current events)
  • Personal choices and decisions
  • A process of change that is common and a path
    that is unique for each smoker

10
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How Do People Change?
  • People change voluntarily only when
  • They Become interested and concerned about the
    need for change
  • They Become convinced that the change is in their
    best interests or will benefit them more than
    cost them
  • They Organize a plan of action that they are
    committed to implementing
  • They Take the actions that are necessary to make
    the change and sustain the change

12
Stage of Change Tasks
  • Awareness, Concern,
  • Hope, Confidence
  • Risk-Reward Analysis Solid Decision to Change
  • Commitment Creating An Effective/Acceptable
    Plan
  • Adequate Implementation and Revising of Plan
  • Integration of new behavior into Lifestyle
  • Precontemplation
  • not interested
  • Contemplation
  • considering
  • Preparation
  • Getting Ready
  • Action
  • Initial Change
  • Maintenance
  • Sustained Change

DiClemente. Addiction and Change How Addictions
Develop and Addicted People Recover. NY Guilford
Press 2003. DiClemente. J Addictions Nursing.
2005165.
13
The Transtheoretical Model of Intentional
Behavior Change
STAGES OF CHANGE PRECONTEMPLATION ?
CONTEMPLATION ? PREPARATION ? ACTION ?
MAINTENANCE
PROCESSES OF CHANGE COGNITIVE/EXPERIENTIAL BEH
AVIORAL   Consciousness Raising Self-Liberatio
n Self-Revaluation Counter-conditioning Envir
onmental Reevaluation Stimulus
Control Emotional Arousal/Dramatic
Relief Reinforcement Management Social
Liberation Helping Relationships CONTEXT OF
CHANGE 1. Current Life Situation 2. Beliefs
and Attitudes 3. Interpersonal Relationships 4.
Social Systems 5. Enduring Personal
Characteristics MARKERS OF CHANGE Decisional
Balance Self-Efficacy/Tempta
tion
14
Theoretical and practical considerations related
to movement through the Stages of Change
Motivation Decision-Making
Self-efficacy
Precontemplation Contemplation
Preparation Action Maintenance
Personal Environmental Decisional
Cognitive Behavioral Concerns
Pressure Balance Experiential
Processes (Pros
Cons) Processes Recycling
Relapse
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Addiction and Change
  • Both acquisition of and recovery from an
    addiction require a personal journey through an
    intentional change process
  • The journey is influenced at various points
  • by factors identified in etiological models
  • by personal decisional considerations and
    choices
  • Personal choices are influenced by and in turn
    influence genetic, developmental,
    characterological, and social forces
  • There is an interaction between the individual
    and the surrounding risk and protective factors
    that involves a Process of Change

17
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18
THE STAGES OF CHANGE FOR ADDICTION AND
RECOVERY
ADDICTION
Dependence
PC
C
PA
A
M
PROCESSES, CONTEXT AND MARKERS OF CHANGE
PC
C
PA
A
M
Sustained Cessation
Dependence
RECOVERY
19
Stage Based Epidemiology
PC
M
PC
C
M
C
A
A
PA
PA
20
Maryland Adult Tobacco Survey (MATS)
2000 MATS
2002 MATS
  • 27,192 participants
  • 45.2 Male
  • 72.9 White
  • Mean Age 42.4 years
  • 74.9 Ever Married
  • 89.1 HS grad
  • 16,596 participants
  • 43.7 Male
  • 76.7 White
  • Mean Age 45.8 years
  • 71.3 Ever Married
  • 86.5 HS grad

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22
Stage of Change for Smoking Cessation in the
Maryland Adult Tobacco Survey (MATS)
  • Participants were classified into 5 Stages of
    Smoking Cessation
  • Precontemplation Current smokers who are not
    planning on quitting smoking in the next 6 months
  • Contemplation Current smokers who are planning
    on quitting smoking in the next 6 months but have
    not made a quit attempt in the past year
  • Preparation Current smokers who are definitely
    planning to quit within next 30 days and have
    made a quit attempt in the past year
  • Action Individuals who are not currently
    smoking and have stopped smoking within the past
    6 months
  • Maintenance Individuals who are not currently
    smoking and have stopped smoking for longer than
    6 months but less than 5 years

DiClemente, 2003
23
Stages of Change for Ever Smokers
2002 MATS
2000 MATS
24
Table 1 Stages of Change for Current Smokers
2000 MATS
2002 MATS
25
Stages of Change Ethnicity
  • 2000 MATS
  • Precontemplation
  • 33.4 vs. 42.7
  • Contemplation
  • 20.5 vs. 15.7
  • Preparation
  • 19.7 vs. 13.7
  • Action
  • 4.3 vs. 6.0
  • Maintenance
  • 22.0 vs. 21.9
  • 2002 MATS
  • Precontemplation
  • 28.8 vs. 38.3
  • Contemplation
  • 18.1 vs. 15.3
  • Preparation
  • 22.3 vs. 13.7
  • Action
  • 6.4 vs. 7.5
  • Maintenance
  • 24.5 vs. 25.2

Non-White White
26
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28
Cyclical Model for Intervention
  • Most smokers will recycle through multiple quit
    attempts and multiple interventions.
  • However successful cessation occurs for large
    numbers of smokers over time.
  • Keys to successful recycling
  • Persistent efforts
  • Repeated contacts
  • Helping the smoker take the next step
  • Bolster self-efficacy and motivation
  • Match strategy to patient stage of change

29
Challenges Along the Smokers Journey to Cessation
  • Becoming convinced of the need to quit NOW
  • Making a firm decision supported by strong
    emotional and rational reasons and values
  • Creating a strong commitment and a viable,
    effective plan
  • Making quitting a priority among multiple demands
  • Managing the initial withdrawal and early threats
    to give up on the effort and return to smoking
  • Integrating abstinence from smoking into daily
    routines and lifestyle
  • Being willing to keep trying despite setbacks and
    to learn from relapses how to get cessation right

30
Special Problems and Populations for Cessation
  • Access to effective treatments
  • Proliferation of alternative approaches
  • Challenges of subgroups of smokers
  • mentally ill
  • low SES
  • adolescents
  • women

31
STAR Project
  • 304 participants
  • 76 persons with Schizophrenia
  • 24 persons with Affective D/O with Psychosis

32
Important Considerations for SMI
  • Substance abuse and smoking by individuals with
    severe mental illness is ubiquitous.
  • It is not clear if individuals with schizophrenia
    can access and utilize a similar process of
    change as other drug abusing individuals.
  • It is also not clear whether individuals with
    Schizophrenia differ from other non psychotic
    individuals in terms of their profiles on process
    measures identified in the Transtheoretical Model

33
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37
SUMMARY OF A RECENT STUDY
  • Measures of readiness and other process variables
    demonstrated reliability and construct validity
    among SMI patients who smoke.
  • Schizophrenia patients appear to be using the
    same or similar process of change in managing
    their smoking cessation as other non SMI smokers
  • Although neurocognitive deficits among patients
    with schizophrenia interfere with access to some
    higher order cognitive functions and may modulate
    the process, these patients appear to access and
    use the intentional process of change as
    described in the TTM in managing and recovering
    from substance abuse, in this case nicotine
    dependence.

38
Increasing Population Quit Rates The
Opportunity and the Problem
  • Greatest hope for HP2010 goal lt 12 adult
    prevalence
  • Enormous potential to save lives, reduce costs,
    reduce health disparities
  • 70 of nations 44.5 million adult smokers want
    to quit and over 40 of the SMI smokers
  • 40.5 make a serious quit attempt each year
    (NHIS, 2004)
  • Fewer than 5 succeed
  • Most attempt to quit on their own, without
    effective treatments

39
The Consumer Demand Roundtable
  • Aim Identify and catalyze innovative strategies
    for increasing demand for and use of
    evidence-based tobacco cessation products and
    services --- particularly in underserved
    low-income and racial/ethnic minority populations

40
Consumer Demand Roundtable Participants
Roundtable Members David Abrams, PhD, NIH OBSSR
Linda Bailey, JD, MH, NAQ Consortium Matt Barry,
MPA, Center Tobacco Free Kids Amanda Graham, PhD,
Brown University David Graham, Pfizer Karen
Gutierrez, Global Dialogue Pablo Izquierdo, MA,
Elevacion Ltd. Katherine Kemper, MBA,
GlaxoSmithKline Tim McAfee, MD, MPH, Free
Clear Myra Muramoto, MD, MPH, U. Arizona
Joachim Roski, PhD, MPH, NCQA Saul Shiffman,
PhD, U Pittsburgh Victor Strecher, PhD, MPH,
HealthMedia, Inc. Susan Swartz, MD, MPH, Maine
Medical Ctr. Frank Vocci, PhD, NIDA Dianne
Wilson, SC African-American Tobacco
Control Expert Advisers Elizabeth Barbeau,
Dianne Barker, Sean Bell, Bill Blatt, Mary Ann
Bright, Peter Coughlan, John Hughes, Gary
Giovino, Danny McGoldrick, John Pinney, Connie
Revell, Dawn Robbins
Planning Committee Carlo DiClemente, PhD UMBC
(Chair) C. Tracy Orleans, PhD, RWJF (Co-Chair)
Todd Phillips, MS, Acad. Educational
Development Elaine Arkin, RWJF Stephanie Smith,
PhD, MPH, Princeton/RWJF Kay Kahler Vose, MA.
Porter Novelli Rajni Laurent Sood, MA, Acad.
Educational Dev. Major Funders/Advisers ACS
Bettina Lanyi CDC Corinne Husten, MD, MPH Ann
Malarcher, DrPH, Karen Siener, MPH Legacy
Foundation Amber Hardy Thornton, MPH, CHES,
Cheryl Healton, DrPH , Bill Furmanski, MPH, Helen
Lettlow, PhD NCI Cathy Backinger, PhD NIDA
Frank Vocci. PhD OBSSR Patty Mabry, PhD, Brad
Wibel, PhD RWJF Marjorie Paloma, MPH, Joseph
Marx
41
What is a Consumer?
  • A person who has the power to buy, to choose from
    among options, to demand service, to decide, and
    to manage their choices and lives
  • Individuals with an array of interests, values,
    tastes, opinions, attitudes and intentions
  • A valued commodity to those who offer products
    and services
  • Not just an alternate term for client or patient

42
Why Do We Need Consumer- Centered Care for
Individuals who Smoke?
  • They have choices about services
  • They have to make informed choices about
    treatments (especially as the options increase)
  • They have to comply with any treatment
  • They are in charge of their personal process of
    change

43
The Competitions Getting Stiffer
44
Smokers are very concerned about
Percent of baseline smokers (ages 25 years)
Assessing Hard Core Smoking Survey
45
Smoking helps
Percent of baseline smokers (ages 25 years)
Assessing Hard Core Smoking Survey
46
Smokers Beliefs that May Impede Quitting -
United States, 2004/2005
Source Assessing Hard Core Smoking Survey (ages
25 years) n 1,000
47
Only one-third of smokers correctly report that
patches are less likely to cause a heart attack
than cigarettes...
Cummings KM, Hyland A, Giovino GA, Hastrup J,
Bauer JE, Bansal MA. Are Smokers Adequately
Informed About the Health Risks of Smoking and
Medicinal Nicotine? Nicotine Tobacco Research
20046(Supplement 3)S333-S340.
48
A Consumer-Centered Perspective
  • Critical Shifts in Perspective from
  • Pathology to Problems
  • Pulling or Pushing to Persuasion
  • Patient to Partner
  • Provider to Facilitator
  • Outcomes to Options
  • Management to Motivation Marketing
  • Reactive to Proactive Care
  • Examples

49
Going To Where The Smokers Are Brief
Counseling/Medication
50
Highlights from Roundtable Discussions
  • Reframe the cessation process  -- quitting as a
    journey, coaching vs.. counseling, NRT
    misconceptions, story-telling 
  • Establish a seal of approval for proven
    products and services
  •  
  • Find new ways to market cessation
    products/services to underserved low-income and
    racial/ethnic minority populations
  •  
  • Find new ways to "design for demand" -- to
    make proven products/services more appealing and
    engaging (involve consumers, apply IDEO design
    process)
  •  
  • Build ongoing relationships with smokers (and
    their supporters) to reach them before, during,
    and beyond their quit journey 

51
Highlights from Roundtable Discussions (cont)
  • Establish databases of smokers and reconnect
    with them periodically --"viral marketing
  •  Improve surveillance of quitting and treatment
    use what gets measured gets changed
  • "Connect the dots"
  • Link multiple different treatment products and
    services (quitline, medication, counseling,
    on-line)
  • Take better advantage of policy changes
    (e.g., clean indoor airs laws, tobacco tax
    increases, coverage expansions) 
  • Increase demand among employers, insurers and
    health plans the meta-consumers
  • Find ways to embed and refine innovations in
    existing work -- opportunistic innovations,
    prototypic successes, early wins 
  •  

52
New York City
Coordinated policies and actions can stop the
nation's leading epidemic. The increase in the
cigarette tax, implementation of the Smoke Free
Air Act, our nicotine patch distribution program,
and public education about the health risks
associated with tobacco have prevented literally
tens of thousands of premature deaths." -
Commissioner Thomas R. Frieden, MD, MPH
NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
53
Etiology of Addictions
Conditioning
Social Influences
Genetics
Abuse
Personality
Initial Use
Self-Regulated Use
Physiology
Coping/Expectancies
Dependence
Environment
Reinforcement
All of these factors can have arrows to initial
experience and then to any or all of the three
patterns of use. Most could have arrows that
demonstrate linear or reciprocal causality as
well
54
THE STAGES OF CHANGE FOR ADDICTION AND
RECOVERY
ADDICTION
Dependence
PC
C
PA
A
M
PROCESSES, CONTEXT AND MARKERS OF CHANGE
PC
C
PA
A
M
Sustained Cessation
Dependence
RECOVERY
55
2000 Maryland Youth Tobacco Survey (MYTS)
  • Secondary data analyses of the Maryland Youth
    Tobacco Survey (MYTS, 2000)
  • Classroom-based survey, administered throughout
    Maryland
  • Participants were public school students (N
    47,839), between the ages of 12 and 18 years
  • The majority of the sample was Caucasian (69)
    and over half were Female (52), with a median
    age of 14 years

56
All adolescents were classified into Stages of
Smoking Initiation by Level of Experience
  • Level of Experience is analogous to prevalence
    measures with
  • Never Smoked Inexperienced
  • Smoked Less than 6 days Exposed
  • Smoked 6 days Experienced
  • Youth were classified according to their Stage of
    Smoking Initiation using
  • Lifetime Smoking
  • Ever smoked
  • Future Intentions
  • Smoke in next year?
  • Current Smoking
  • of days smoked past 30 days
  • Duration of Current Smoking
  • How long smoked current rate?

57
Table 1. Distributions of Stage of Smoking
Initiation Level of Experience
58
Logistic Regressions
  • Using 2000 MYTS data, Logistic Regressions were
    estimated for both the Stages of Smoking
    Initiation Level of Experience
  • 3 Key Risk Factors from 3 Domains of Influence
    were selected
  • Behavioral
  • Would you ever use or wear something that has a
    tobacco company name or picture on it such as a
    lighter, t-shirt, hat, or sunglasses?
  • Attitudinal
  • Do you think young people who smoke cigarettes
    have more friends?
  • Intention
  • If One of Your Best Friends Offered You a
    Cigarette, Would You Smoke It?

59
Table 4. Odds-Ratios of Stages of Smoking
Initiation and Level of Experience for Intention
Risk Factor Accept Cigarette Offer from Best
Friend
plt.001
60
Table 3. Odds-Ratios of Stages of Smoking
Initiation Level of Experience for Attitudinal
Risk Factor Smokers Have More Friends
plt.001
61
Distribution of Stages of Smoking Initiation by
Wave School Status
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Adolescent Smoking in Maryland Stage Status /
Transitions
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PREVENTION OF INITIATION OF ADDICTION
PC - C
C - PA
PA - A
A - M
ALREADY AFFLICTED
AT- RISK PREVENTION
POPULATION PREVENTION
69
THE MARYLAND RESOURCE CENTER
  • The Maryland Quitting Use and Initiation of
    Tobacco (MDQuit) Resource Center is dedicated to
    assisting providers and programs in reducing
    tobacco use among citizens across the state.
  • Our mission is to link professionals and
    providers to state tobacco initiatives, to
    provide evidence-based, effective resources and
    tools to local programs, to create and support an
    extensive, collaborative network of tobacco
    prevention and cessation professionals, and to
    provide a forum for sharing best practices
    throughout the state of Maryland.
  • WEBSITE www.MDQuit.org PHONE 410-455-3628
    FAX 410-455-1755

70
THE MARYLAND QUITLINE
  • 1-800-QUITNOW is up and running in the State of
    Maryland!
  • 1-800-QUITNOW/1-800-784-8669
  • Maryland Smokers can now call 1-800-QUIT-NOW to
    get information about quitting smoking. This FREE
    service is available to non-smokers as well who
    are looking for information for a family member,
    a loved one, or even a patient or client.
  • Calls to 1-800-QUIT-NOW are answered by
    well-trained persons who are there to improve a
    smoker's chances of successfully quitting
    smoking.

71
Fax Referral Program
  • Fax to Assist is located at web
    site where there is on-line training and
    certification for HIPAA-covered entities
  • Providers can refer their patients or clients
    (who wish to quit, preferably within thirty
    days), to the Maryland Tobacco Quitline
  • Tobacco users will sign the Maryland Fax Referral
    enrollment form during a face-to-face
    intervention with a provider (e.g., doctor's
    office, hospital, dentist's office, clinic or
    agency site)
  • The provider will then fax the form to the
    Quitline. Within 48 hours, a Quit Coach makes
    the initial call to the tobacco user to begin the
    coaching process

72
Opportunities and Innovations
  • Explore new technologies to provide support and
    individualized feedback
  • Get health care providers to ask and assist
  • Explore how to use current and new
    pharmacological aids
  • Use new motivational strategies and skill
    building treatments
  • Focus on health and well-being and teachable
    moments
  • Focus on subpopulation needs (women, mentally
    ill, adolescent smokers)
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