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. 2020 Nov;140(6):351-361.
doi: 10.1177/1757913920912436. Epub 2020 May 11.

Using e-cigarettes for smoking cessation: evaluation of a pilot project in the North West of England

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Using e-cigarettes for smoking cessation: evaluation of a pilot project in the North West of England

M Coffey et al. Perspect Public Health. 2020 Nov.

Abstract

Aims: E-cigarettes have been advocated as an effective smoking cessation intervention, with evidence indicating that they are substantially less harmful than conventional cigarettes. As a result, a pilot to encourage people to swap from conventional cigarettes to e-cigarettes was conducted in 2018 in a socially deprived area in the North West of England. This evaluation highlights the key findings from the pilot.

Methods: An analysis of secondary data at 4 weeks (n = 1022) was undertaken to predict those who used solely used e-cigarettes (i.e. had quit tobacco, as confirmed by a carbon monoxide test, CO < 10 ppm) from baseline characteristics, using chi-square tests and logistic regression. Baseline data were demographics, smoking levels and service provider type.

Results: Of the 1022 participants who engaged with the pilot 614 were still engaged at 4 weeks, of whom 62% had quit; quitting was more likely in younger participants (aged 18-24) and less likely in those who were sick and disabled. Of those who still smoked tobacco at week 4 (n = 226), smoking had reduced from a baseline of 19.1 cigarettes/day to 8.7. Overall, 37% (381) of those initially enrolled were confirmed to be using an e-cigarette on its own at follow-up. Successful quit was associated with occupation (unemployed, 33% vs intermediate, 47%, p = .023) and residing in the less deprived quintiles of deprivation (50% vs 34% in the most deprived quintile, p = .016).

Conclusions: Making the conservative assumption that all those not in contact at 4 weeks were still smoking tobacco, for every five people entering the scheme, three people stayed on the programme and reduced their cigarette smoking and one person cut out tobacco altogether. E-cigarettes appear to be an effective nicotine replacement therapy; however, further research is required to determine whether e-cigarette users are more likely to reduce their overall nicotine consumption in the longer term.

Keywords: e-cigarettes; evaluation; smoking.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest: This work was commissioned by Salford City Council and carried out independently by the University of Salford. While Salford City Council and Great Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership were given the opportunity to input into the final report and drafting this paper, their input was limited to the context and background of the pilot, rather than the analysis or interpretation of the findings.

References

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