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    Opt-out of Stop Smoking Service referral via SMS: a controlled interrupted time series analysis

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    Author
    Wormall, Stephen
    Duggan, Dominic
    Vlaev, Ivo
    Morling, Joanne R
    Keyword
    Opt-out
    Population health management
    Primary care
    Smoking cessation
    Tobacco
    Date
    2026-01
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1016/j.puhe.2025.106025
    Abstract
    Objectives: To evaluate the impact of opt-out and self-referral (opt-in) invitations to a Stop Smoking Service (SSS) delivered via Short Message Service (SMS) by 14 general practices in Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom, on 28-day self-reported smoking abstinence. Study design: Controlled and uncontrolled Interrupted Time series Analysis (ITSA) with cohort analysis. Methods: A controlled ITSA of 13 practices (N = 145,170) that delivered opt-out invitations to 3,994 patients (59 % men; mean age 42.0 years) and cohort analysis. An uncontrolled ITSA of one practice (N = 19,100) that delivered self-referral invitations to 3,676 patients (56 % men; mean age 43.8 years). Results: Most patients did not opt out (91.7 %; 3,663/3,994), were contactable and confirmed smoking (52.4 %; 1,918/3,659). Of this group 21.7 % (417/1918) booked SSS appointments, and 7.1 % (137/1918) abstained from smoking (29 messages per abstinence). Most abstainers (73 %; 100/137) lived in high deprivation areas (IMD 1/2). Controlled ITSA indicated an immediate level increase of 13.1 in the weekly count of SSS patients who subsequently achieved abstinence (95 % CI: 5.0-21.1; p = 0.002). In the intervention month, 168 patients reported abstinence, 142 more than the pre-intervention mean of 25.6 (95 % prediction interval: 20.1-40.1). Uncontrolled ITSA indicated self-referral invitations did not change the count of SSS patients who became abstinent (0.22 patients per week; 95 % CI: 0.61-1.16; p = 0.601). Conclusion: Proactive invitations to opt-out of SSS referral delivered via SMS by general practices were associated with a substantial increase in self-reported 28-day smoking abstinence. Self-referral invitations were not. The opt-out approach appears low-cost and scalable with potential to impact deprived populations.
    Citation
    Wormall S, Duggan D, Vlaev I, Morling JR. Opt-out of Stop Smoking Service referral via SMS: a controlled interrupted time series analysis. Public Health. 2025 Nov 26;250:106025
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/19968
    Collections
    Primary Care Publications

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