학술논문

Recruitment and initial interest of men in yoga for smoking cessation: QuitStrong, a randomized control pilot study
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Translational Behavioral Medicine: Practice, Policy, Research. June 2015 5(2):177-188
Subject
Smoking cessation
Tobacco use cessation
Yoga
Exercise
Affect
Mind-body therapies
Language
English
ISSN
1869-6716
1613-9860
Abstract
Innovative treatments like yoga for men’s smoking cessation (SC) are lacking. To examine the feasibility and acceptability of yoga for men’s SC. We randomly assigned eligible men (smoker, ≥5 cigarettes/day, age 18–65) to receive cognitive behavioral therapy for SC, plus a yoga or wellness program. Measures included feasibility (recruitment, class attendance) and acceptability (customer satisfaction). We enrolled 38 of 49 eligible men of 167 screened in response to ads (mean age 39.9 years, ±13.7) who smoked on average 18.6 cigarettes/day (±8.3). Wellness (75.8 %) versus yoga (56 %) men attended more SC classes, p < 0.01. Sixty percent attended ≥1 yoga class. Men reported greater satisfaction with in-house versus community yoga classes. Wellness appears to be the preferred intervention; results indicated that it may be more feasible and showed increased attendance at smoking classes. To be fully feasible, yoga + SC may need to be a unified program offering all classes tailored for men and in the same location.