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Exercise to Enhance Smoking Cessation: the Getting Physical on Cigarette Randomized Control Trial

journal contribution
posted on 2016-06-01, 00:00 authored by H Prapavessis, S De Jesus, L Fitzgeorge, G Faulkner, Ralph MaddisonRalph Maddison, S Batten
BACKGROUND: Exercise has been proposed as a useful smoking cessation aid. PURPOSE: The purpose of the present study is to determine the effect of an exercise-aided smoking cessation intervention program, with built-in maintenance components, on post-intervention 14-, 26- and 56-week cessation rates. METHOD: Female cigarette smokers (n = 413) participating in a supervised exercise and nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) smoking cessation program were randomized to one of four conditions: exercise + smoking cessation maintenance, exercise maintenance + contact control, smoking cessation maintenance + contact control or contact control. The primary outcome was continuous smoking abstinence. RESULTS: Abstinence differences were found between the exercise and equal contact non-exercise maintenance groups at weeks 14 (57 vs 43 %), 26 (27 vs 21 %) and 56 (26 vs 23.5 %), respectively. Only the week 14 difference approached significance, p = 0.08. CONCLUSIONS: An exercise-aided NRT smoking cessation program with built-in maintenance components enhances post-intervention cessation rates at week 14 but not at weeks 26 and 56.

History

Journal

Annals of Behavioral Medicine

Volume

50

Pagination

358-369

Location

England

ISSN

0883-6612

eISSN

1532-4796

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, Springer

Issue

3

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC