New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia

This report describes a pilot cessation study aimed to test well-proven approaches to helping smokers quit in a resource-poor setting. The group-randomized trial (by village) included 788 poor smokers in 18 villages. Participants were assigned to one of three intervention groups : counseling only, nicotine patches only, and a combination of both. 47 people dropped out soon after the interventions began. Quit rates varied across the intervention groups, and were significantly higher for the two groups that received counseling. Whether or not the counseling groups received nicotine patches made little difference to outcomes. The 12-month continuous abstinence rates were 17 percent for the counseling only group, 15 percent for the counseling plus NRT group, and 7 percent for the group that received nicotine patches only. The results suggest that cessation support programs could be successful and cost effective in Indonesia, and achieve comparable results to similar efforts in America, Canada, Australia, the UK and Europe.

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Main Authors: Yürekli, Ayda Aysun, Tera Dewi, Fatwa Sari, de Beyer, Joy, Cornelia, Ayu Helena, Hohnen, Janet
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2004-10
Subjects:ADVERSE HEALTH, ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS, ADVERTISING, BIRTH WEIGHT, BURNS, CANCER, CANCERS, CARE PROVIDERS, CARE SERVICES, CIGARETTE SMOKING, COST EFFECTIVENESS, COUNSELORS, DOCTORS, DOUBLE BURDEN, FAMILIES, HEALTH, HEALTH BEHAVIOR, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH NUTRITION, HEALTH OUTCOMES, HEALTH SERVICES, HEALTH WORKERS, HEART DISEASE, ILLNESSES, INFECTIONS, INFECTIOUS DISEASES, INTERVENTION, MEDICINE, MIDDLE AGE, MORBIDITY, MORTALITY, NATIONAL HEALTH, NURSES, NUTRITION, PATIENTS, PHYSICIANS, POSTER, POSTERS, PRODUCTIVITY, PUBLIC HEALTH, RELIGIOUS LEADERS, RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS, SCREENING, SMOKERS, SMOKING, SMOKING CESSATION, SMOKING CESSATION COUNSELING, SMOKING POLICIES, SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY, SOCIAL ATTITUDES, SOCIAL NORMS, THERAPY, TOBACCO, TOBACCO ADVERTISING, TOBACCO CONTROL, TOBACCO EPIDEMIC, TOBACCO USE, WORKERS, YOUNG PEOPLE, YOUNG WOMEN, YOUTH,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/10/6065477/new-ways-helping-poor-smokers-quit-central-java-indonesia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13779
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spelling dig-okr-10986137792021-04-23T14:03:09Z New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia Yürekli, Ayda Aysun Tera Dewi, Fatwa Sari de Beyer, Joy Cornelia, Ayu Helena Hohnen, Janet ADVERSE HEALTH ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS ADVERTISING BIRTH WEIGHT BURNS CANCER CANCERS CARE PROVIDERS CARE SERVICES CIGARETTE SMOKING COST EFFECTIVENESS COUNSELORS DOCTORS DOUBLE BURDEN FAMILIES HEALTH HEALTH BEHAVIOR HEALTH CARE HEALTH NUTRITION HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH WORKERS HEART DISEASE ILLNESSES INFECTIONS INFECTIOUS DISEASES INTERVENTION MEDICINE MIDDLE AGE MORBIDITY MORTALITY NATIONAL HEALTH NURSES NUTRITION PATIENTS PHYSICIANS POSTER POSTERS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC HEALTH RELIGIOUS LEADERS RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS SCREENING SMOKERS SMOKING SMOKING CESSATION SMOKING CESSATION COUNSELING SMOKING POLICIES SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY SOCIAL ATTITUDES SOCIAL NORMS THERAPY TOBACCO TOBACCO ADVERTISING TOBACCO CONTROL TOBACCO EPIDEMIC TOBACCO USE WORKERS YOUNG PEOPLE YOUNG WOMEN YOUTH This report describes a pilot cessation study aimed to test well-proven approaches to helping smokers quit in a resource-poor setting. The group-randomized trial (by village) included 788 poor smokers in 18 villages. Participants were assigned to one of three intervention groups : counseling only, nicotine patches only, and a combination of both. 47 people dropped out soon after the interventions began. Quit rates varied across the intervention groups, and were significantly higher for the two groups that received counseling. Whether or not the counseling groups received nicotine patches made little difference to outcomes. The 12-month continuous abstinence rates were 17 percent for the counseling only group, 15 percent for the counseling plus NRT group, and 7 percent for the group that received nicotine patches only. The results suggest that cessation support programs could be successful and cost effective in Indonesia, and achieve comparable results to similar efforts in America, Canada, Australia, the UK and Europe. 2013-06-05T15:51:30Z 2013-06-05T15:51:30Z 2004-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/10/6065477/new-ways-helping-poor-smokers-quit-central-java-indonesia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13779 English en_US HNP Discussion Paper; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research East Asia and Pacific Indonesia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic ADVERSE HEALTH
ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS
ADVERTISING
BIRTH WEIGHT
BURNS
CANCER
CANCERS
CARE PROVIDERS
CARE SERVICES
CIGARETTE SMOKING
COST EFFECTIVENESS
COUNSELORS
DOCTORS
DOUBLE BURDEN
FAMILIES
HEALTH
HEALTH BEHAVIOR
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH NUTRITION
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH WORKERS
HEART DISEASE
ILLNESSES
INFECTIONS
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
INTERVENTION
MEDICINE
MIDDLE AGE
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
NATIONAL HEALTH
NURSES
NUTRITION
PATIENTS
PHYSICIANS
POSTER
POSTERS
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
RELIGIOUS LEADERS
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS
SCREENING
SMOKERS
SMOKING
SMOKING CESSATION
SMOKING CESSATION COUNSELING
SMOKING POLICIES
SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
SOCIAL NORMS
THERAPY
TOBACCO
TOBACCO ADVERTISING
TOBACCO CONTROL
TOBACCO EPIDEMIC
TOBACCO USE
WORKERS
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG WOMEN
YOUTH
ADVERSE HEALTH
ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS
ADVERTISING
BIRTH WEIGHT
BURNS
CANCER
CANCERS
CARE PROVIDERS
CARE SERVICES
CIGARETTE SMOKING
COST EFFECTIVENESS
COUNSELORS
DOCTORS
DOUBLE BURDEN
FAMILIES
HEALTH
HEALTH BEHAVIOR
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH NUTRITION
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH WORKERS
HEART DISEASE
ILLNESSES
INFECTIONS
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
INTERVENTION
MEDICINE
MIDDLE AGE
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
NATIONAL HEALTH
NURSES
NUTRITION
PATIENTS
PHYSICIANS
POSTER
POSTERS
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
RELIGIOUS LEADERS
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS
SCREENING
SMOKERS
SMOKING
SMOKING CESSATION
SMOKING CESSATION COUNSELING
SMOKING POLICIES
SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
SOCIAL NORMS
THERAPY
TOBACCO
TOBACCO ADVERTISING
TOBACCO CONTROL
TOBACCO EPIDEMIC
TOBACCO USE
WORKERS
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG WOMEN
YOUTH
spellingShingle ADVERSE HEALTH
ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS
ADVERTISING
BIRTH WEIGHT
BURNS
CANCER
CANCERS
CARE PROVIDERS
CARE SERVICES
CIGARETTE SMOKING
COST EFFECTIVENESS
COUNSELORS
DOCTORS
DOUBLE BURDEN
FAMILIES
HEALTH
HEALTH BEHAVIOR
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH NUTRITION
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH WORKERS
HEART DISEASE
ILLNESSES
INFECTIONS
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
INTERVENTION
MEDICINE
MIDDLE AGE
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
NATIONAL HEALTH
NURSES
NUTRITION
PATIENTS
PHYSICIANS
POSTER
POSTERS
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
RELIGIOUS LEADERS
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS
SCREENING
SMOKERS
SMOKING
SMOKING CESSATION
SMOKING CESSATION COUNSELING
SMOKING POLICIES
SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
SOCIAL NORMS
THERAPY
TOBACCO
TOBACCO ADVERTISING
TOBACCO CONTROL
TOBACCO EPIDEMIC
TOBACCO USE
WORKERS
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG WOMEN
YOUTH
ADVERSE HEALTH
ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS
ADVERTISING
BIRTH WEIGHT
BURNS
CANCER
CANCERS
CARE PROVIDERS
CARE SERVICES
CIGARETTE SMOKING
COST EFFECTIVENESS
COUNSELORS
DOCTORS
DOUBLE BURDEN
FAMILIES
HEALTH
HEALTH BEHAVIOR
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH NUTRITION
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH WORKERS
HEART DISEASE
ILLNESSES
INFECTIONS
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
INTERVENTION
MEDICINE
MIDDLE AGE
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
NATIONAL HEALTH
NURSES
NUTRITION
PATIENTS
PHYSICIANS
POSTER
POSTERS
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
RELIGIOUS LEADERS
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS
SCREENING
SMOKERS
SMOKING
SMOKING CESSATION
SMOKING CESSATION COUNSELING
SMOKING POLICIES
SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
SOCIAL NORMS
THERAPY
TOBACCO
TOBACCO ADVERTISING
TOBACCO CONTROL
TOBACCO EPIDEMIC
TOBACCO USE
WORKERS
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG WOMEN
YOUTH
Yürekli, Ayda Aysun
Tera Dewi, Fatwa Sari
de Beyer, Joy
Cornelia, Ayu Helena
Hohnen, Janet
New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia
description This report describes a pilot cessation study aimed to test well-proven approaches to helping smokers quit in a resource-poor setting. The group-randomized trial (by village) included 788 poor smokers in 18 villages. Participants were assigned to one of three intervention groups : counseling only, nicotine patches only, and a combination of both. 47 people dropped out soon after the interventions began. Quit rates varied across the intervention groups, and were significantly higher for the two groups that received counseling. Whether or not the counseling groups received nicotine patches made little difference to outcomes. The 12-month continuous abstinence rates were 17 percent for the counseling only group, 15 percent for the counseling plus NRT group, and 7 percent for the group that received nicotine patches only. The results suggest that cessation support programs could be successful and cost effective in Indonesia, and achieve comparable results to similar efforts in America, Canada, Australia, the UK and Europe.
format Publications & Research :: Working Paper
topic_facet ADVERSE HEALTH
ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS
ADVERTISING
BIRTH WEIGHT
BURNS
CANCER
CANCERS
CARE PROVIDERS
CARE SERVICES
CIGARETTE SMOKING
COST EFFECTIVENESS
COUNSELORS
DOCTORS
DOUBLE BURDEN
FAMILIES
HEALTH
HEALTH BEHAVIOR
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH NUTRITION
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH WORKERS
HEART DISEASE
ILLNESSES
INFECTIONS
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
INTERVENTION
MEDICINE
MIDDLE AGE
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
NATIONAL HEALTH
NURSES
NUTRITION
PATIENTS
PHYSICIANS
POSTER
POSTERS
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
RELIGIOUS LEADERS
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS
SCREENING
SMOKERS
SMOKING
SMOKING CESSATION
SMOKING CESSATION COUNSELING
SMOKING POLICIES
SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
SOCIAL NORMS
THERAPY
TOBACCO
TOBACCO ADVERTISING
TOBACCO CONTROL
TOBACCO EPIDEMIC
TOBACCO USE
WORKERS
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG WOMEN
YOUTH
author Yürekli, Ayda Aysun
Tera Dewi, Fatwa Sari
de Beyer, Joy
Cornelia, Ayu Helena
Hohnen, Janet
author_facet Yürekli, Ayda Aysun
Tera Dewi, Fatwa Sari
de Beyer, Joy
Cornelia, Ayu Helena
Hohnen, Janet
author_sort Yürekli, Ayda Aysun
title New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia
title_short New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia
title_full New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia
title_fullStr New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed New Ways of Helping Poor Smokers to Quit in Central Java, Indonesia
title_sort new ways of helping poor smokers to quit in central java, indonesia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2004-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/10/6065477/new-ways-helping-poor-smokers-quit-central-java-indonesia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13779
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AT corneliaayuhelena newwaysofhelpingpoorsmokerstoquitincentraljavaindonesia
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