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Letting the urge pass: Can an app focused on acceptance help quit smoking?

*Disclaimer: Please note that parts of this English sci-fly were automatically translated.*

During moments of stress or high emotion, do you notice feeling more tempted to give in to unhealthy habits, such as a cigarette? Emotional tension can trigger a craving for smoking.

This may explain why quitting smoking is especially difficult for people with mental illness, as they are on average more likely to experience (difficulty dealing with) negative emotions. Could an app focused on acceptance of cravings rather than avoidance offer a solution? A recent study examines whether the iCanQuit app, based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), is more effective than a regular stop app.

Background

Research methods

WHAT?
This study compares the effectiveness of an app based on ACT (iCanQuit) with an app based on the US Clinical Practice Guidelines (QuitGuide) in adults with mental illness. Whereas the iCanQuit app emphasizes acceptance of internal triggers and using personal life values to motivate quitting, the QuitGuide app provides more techniques and information about triggers to smoking, barriers to quitting and negative health consequences of smoking.

WHO?

1504 smoking adults from the United States with a diagnosis of a mental disorder. The disorder was based on self-report (bipolar disorder and schizophrenia) or on a screening questionnaire (depression, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, panic disorder and PTSD).

HOW?
The study used data from a 12-month randomized trial comparing the iCanQuit app to QuitGuide. Data were collected between 2017 and 2019 through online questionnaires. Participants reported (among others) abstinence (not smoking for at least 30 days), app use and satisfaction, and acceptance of sensations, feelings and thoughts that trigger smoking.

RESULTS

DETAILS

Santiago-Torres, M., Mull, K. E., Sullivan, B. M., Prochaska, J. J., Zvolensky, M. J., & Bricker, J. B. (2024). Can an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy‐Based Smartphone App Help Individuals with Mental Health Disorders Quit Smoking?. Depression and Anxiety2024(1), 1055801. https://doi.org/10.1155/2024/1055801

This sci-fly was written by Dagmar Nollet (research master’s student in Behavioural Science, Radboud University) for RAD-blog, the blog on smoking, alcohol, drugs and diet.

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