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Want to
quit Smoking? Study seeks Adult Smokers
nationwide for a free, Online
Smoking-Cessation Study
Newswise, June 2010 — Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center announced today that it is launching
a new online study to help people quit
smoking. The study, called WebQuit, is
enrolling adult smokers nationwide.
Participation is free to eligible
individuals.
The goal of WebQuit is to improve the
effectiveness of online smoking-cessation
programs. Study director Jonathan Bricker,
Ph.D., a clinical psychologist who
specializes in smoking-cessation research,
says that online smoking-cessation programs
are improving but still have a very long way
to go.
“That old Mark Twain quote that ‘quitting
smoking is easy – I’ve done it a thousand
times’ unfortunately is still very true
today despite the plethora of
smoking-cessation methods available to
people,” said Bricker, a faculty member in
the Cancer Prevention Program in the
Hutchinson Center’s Public Health Sciences
Division.
“But I think web-based interventions are the
wave of the future, not only because they
are generally cheaper than personal therapy
but because as a culture we are becoming
more reliant on the convenient
do-it-yourself options we find online.”
Study participants will not be paid, but
they will receive interactive tools for
dealing more effectively with urges to
smoke. They also will receive step-by-step
guides for quitting smoking, personalized
plans for quitting and staying quit, and
electronic links for reaching one-on-one
expert help for quitting.
Participants will be randomly assigned by
computer (like the tossing of a coin) to one
of two online smoking-cessation programs.
The success rates of participants will then
be compared. He is hopeful that the study
will help adults in their quest to kick the
habit.
“Our goal is to try to find what works and
what doesn’t; what to include in these
programs and how to improve them so they can
become more effective,” said Bricker, also a
faculty member in the Department of
Psychology at the University of Washington.
Involvement in the study will entail
completing online questionnaires, including
several follow-up surveys. Eligible
participants must be at least 18 and not
currently participating in other
smoking-cessation programs, among other
requirements.
To enroll in the WebQuit study or for more
information, please visit
www.webquit.com
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