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1.
Health Promot Pract ; 25(2): 167-169, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37118924

ABSTRACT

Since 2017, the Vermont Tobacco Control Program (VTCP) has worked to reduce the impact of flavored tobacco products on Vermonters. With the proposed U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) rules banning menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars and proposed legislation banning sales of all menthol and flavored tobacco products in Vermont, VTCP prioritized resources to support cessation among Vermonters who use menthol tobacco products. In March 2021, VTCP began offering a tailored quitline protocol for adults who use menthol tobacco, including financial incentives, for completed coaching sessions. From March 2021 to May 2022, 66 quitline callers enrolled in the menthol incentive protocol, representing 8% of all quitline callers and 25% of participants in the state's quitline incentive programs. A greater proportion of callers in the menthol incentive program completed three or more quitline calls (58% vs. 38%) and enrolled in phone and text support (61% vs. 32%). Quitline callers enrolled in any incentive protocols (menthol, Medicaid/uninsured, or pregnant) were more likely to request one or two forms of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). Quitlines remain an effective, evidence-based method of tobacco cessation, especially in reaching vulnerable populations. Given the targeted marketing of menthol brands to Black and African American populations, LGBTQ+ populations, youth, and neighborhoods with lower incomes, addressing menthol cigarette use is key to improving health equity and health of Vermonters. Early data indicates that the use of financial incentives can increase engagement with a state quitline among menthol tobacco users through greater completion of cessation coaching calls, enrollment in text message support, and NRT usage.


Subject(s)
Smoking Cessation , Tobacco Products , Adult , Humans , Counseling , Flavoring Agents , Menthol , Motivation , Tobacco Use Cessation Devices , United States
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35805733

ABSTRACT

(1) Background: Young people engage in addictive behaviors, but little is known about how they understand addiction. The present study examined how young people describe addiction in their own words and correlations between their definitions and substance use behaviors. (2) Methods: Young adults (n = 1146) in the PACE Vermont Study responded to an open-ended item "what does "addiction" mean?" in 2019. Responses were coded using three inductive categories and fifteen subcategories. Quantitative analyses examined correlations between addiction theme definitions, demographics, and substance use behaviors. (3) Participants frequently defined addiction by physiological (68%) and psychological changes (65%) and less by behavioral changes (6%), or all three (3%); young adults had higher odds of defining addiction as physiological or behavioral changes than adolescents. Participants who described addiction as "psychological changes" had lower odds of ever electronic vapor product use (OR 0.75, 95% CI 0.57−1.00) than those using another definition, controlling for age and sex. (4) Perceptions of addiction in our sample aligned with existing validated measures of addiction. Findings discriminated between familiar features of addiction and features that may be overlooked by young adults. Substance users may employ definitions that exclude the symptoms they are most likely to experience.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Addictive , Drug Users , Substance-Related Disorders , Adolescent , Behavior, Addictive/psychology , Humans , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , Young Adult
3.
Prev Med ; 165(Pt B): 107079, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35533885

ABSTRACT

Higgins and colleagues' recently-completed randomized controlled trial and pooled data with 4 related trials of smoking cessation in pregnant women in Vermont (USA) showed that abstinence-contingent financial incentives (FI) increased abstinence over control conditions from early pregnancy through 24-weeks postpartum. Control conditions were best practices (BP) alone in the recent trial and payments provided independent of smoking status (noncontingently) in the others. This paper reports economic analyses of abstinence-contingent FI. Merging trial results with maternal and infant healthcare costs from all Vermont Medicaid deliveries in 2019, we computed incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) for quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and compared them to established thresholds. The healthcare sector cost (±standard error) of adding FI to BP averaged $634.76 ± $531.61 per participant. Based on this trial, the increased probability per BP + FI participant of smoking abstinence at 24-weeks postpartum was 3.17%, the cost per additional abstinent woman was $20,043, the incremental health gain was 0.0270 ± 0.0412 QALYs, the ICER was $23,511/QALY gained, and the probabilities that BP + FI was very cost-effective (ICER≤$65,910) and cost-effective (ICER≤$100,000) were 67.9% and 71.0%, respectively. Based on the pooled trials, the corresponding values were even more favorable-8.89%, $7138, 0.0758 ± 0.0178 QALYs, $8371/QALY, 98.6% and 99.3%, respectively. Each dollar invested in abstinence-contingent FI over control smoking-cessation programs yielded $4.20 in economic benefits in the recent trial and $11.90 in the pooled trials (very favorable benefit-cost ratios). Medicaid and commercial insurers may wish to consider covering financial incentives for smoking abstinence as a cost-effective service for pregnant beneficiaries who smoke. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02210832.


Subject(s)
Smoking Cessation , Humans , Female , Pregnancy , Smoking Cessation/methods , Motivation , Postpartum Period , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Cost-Benefit Analysis
4.
Prev Med ; 165(Pt B): 107012, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35248683

ABSTRACT

We report results from a single-blinded randomized controlled trial examining financial incentives for smoking cessation among 249 pregnant and newly postpartum women. Participants included 169 women assigned to best practices (BP) or BP plus financial incentives (BP + FI) for smoking cessation available through 12-weeks postpartum. A third condition included 80 never-smokers (NS) sociodemographically-matched to women who smoked. Trial setting was Burlington, Vermont, USA, January, 2014 through January, 2020. Outcomes included 7-day point-prevalence abstinence antepartum and postpartum, and birth and other infant outcomes during 1st year of life. Reliability and external validity of results were assessed using pooled results from the current and four prior controlled trials coupled with data on maternal-smoking status and birth outcomes for all 2019 singleton live births in Vermont. Compared to BP, BP + FI significantly increased abstinence early- (AOR = 9.97; 95%CI, 3.32-29.93) and late-pregnancy (primary outcome, AOR = 5.61; 95%CI, 2.37-13.28) and through 12-weeks postpartum (AOR = 2.46; CI,1.05-5.75) although not 24- (AOR = 1.31; CI,0.54-3.17) or 48-weeks postpartum (AOR = 1.33; CI,0.55-3.25). There was a significant effect of trial condition on small-for-gestational-age (SGA) deliveries (χ2 [2] = 9.01, P = .01), with percent SGA deliveries (+SEM) greatest in BP, intermediate in BP + FI, and lowest in NS (17.65 + 4.13, 10.81 + 3.61, and 2.53 + 1.77, respectively). Reliability analyses supported the efficacy of financial incentives for increasing abstinence antepartum and postpartum and decreasing SGA deliveries; external-validity analyses supported relationships between antepartum cessation and SGA risk. Adding financial incentives to Best Practice increases smoking cessation among antepartum and postpartum women and improves other maternal-infant outcomes. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02210832.


Subject(s)
Smoking Cessation , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , Smoking Cessation/methods , Motivation , Reproducibility of Results , Postpartum Period , Smoking
5.
Child Adolesc Ment Health ; 27(2): 138-145, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35253363

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: This study examined the impact of COVID-related disruptions on mental health and substance use in young people residing in a state with an initially lower COVID burden and earlier reopening of in-person learning than other states. METHODS: Data come from Waves 3 (Fall 2019) and 4 (Fall 2020) of the Policy and Communication Evaluation (PACE) Vermont, an online cohort study of adolescents (ages 12-17) and young adults (ages 18-25). Participants in Wave 4 (212 adolescents; 662 young adults) completed items on COVID-related stressors, the impact of the pandemic on their substance use, brief mental health scales, and past 30-day substance use. Analyses examined correlational and longitudinal relationships between COVID-related stressors, mental health symptoms, and substance use. RESULTS: More than 60% of participants noted negative effects of the pandemic on their physical, emotional, and social well-being, with greater impacts of COVID-related stressors in young adults than adolescents. There were significant increases in depressive (OR 1.31, 95% CI 1.03, 1.66) and anxiety symptoms (OR 1.34; 95% CI 1.10, 1.64) in young adults between Fall 2019 and Fall 2020. Higher overall COVID Impact scores were associated with higher odds of depressive and anxiety symptoms, as well as past 30-day electronic vapor product use, in adjusted cross-sectional and longitudinal models. CONCLUSIONS: Robust associations between COVID-related distress, mental health, and substance use outcomes in young people signal the opportunity to increase evidence-based interventions while adding novel approaches to minimize longer-term harms of the pandemic on mental health in adolescents and young adults.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Substance-Related Disorders , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Cohort Studies , Cross-Sectional Studies , Humans , Mental Health , SARS-CoV-2 , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Young Adult
6.
Cannabis ; 5(3): 11-22, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37287934

ABSTRACT

Objectives: Cannabis policy evaluations commonly assume equal policy exposure across a state's population using date of implementation as the key independent variable. This study aimed to explore policy knowledge as another measure of exposure and describe the sociodemographic, cognitive, and behavioral correlates of cannabis policy knowledge in young adults in Vermont. Methods: Data are from the PACE Vermont Study (Spring 2019), an online cohort study of Vermonters (12-25). Bivariate and multivariable analyses estimated prevalence ratios (PR) for correlations between knowledge of Vermont's cannabis policy (allowed possession for adults 21 and older) and sociodemographics, cannabis use, and harm perceptions in 1,037 young adults (18-25). Results: Overall, 60.1% of participants correctly described the state's cannabis policy. Being younger, Hispanic, non-White race, and less educated were inversely correlated with policy knowledge. Ever (PR=1.37; 95% CI 1.16-1.63) and past-30-day cannabis use (PR=1.27; 95% CI 1.12-1.45) were positively correlated with policy knowledge. Policy knowledge was more prevalent among young adults who perceived slight risk of harm from weekly cannabis use (vs. no risk; aPR=1.28; 95% CI 1.11-1.48) or agreed that regular cannabis use early in life can negatively affect attention (vs. disagree; aPR=1.55; 95% CI 1.22-1.97). Conclusion: Findings suggest that 40% of Vermont young adults in the study were unaware of current state cannabis policy and that policy knowledge was lower in younger, less educated, Hispanic, and non-White young adults. Future research should explore using a measure of policy knowledge as an exposure or moderator variable to better quantify the effects of changes in cannabis legal status on perceptions and use in young people.

7.
J Med Internet Res ; 22(7): e18446, 2020 07 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32706681

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The standard approach for evaluating the effects of population-level substance use prevention efforts on youth and young adult perceptions and behaviors has been to compare outcomes across states using national surveillance data. Novel surveillance methods that follow individuals over shorter time intervals and capture awareness of substance use prevention policy and communication efforts may provide a stronger basis for their evaluation than annual cross-sectional studies. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to identify a combination of strategies to recruit a sample of youth and young adults sufficiently representative of the Vermont population and determine how best to retain a web-based panel of youth and young adults over a 6-month period. METHODS: Eligible participants were Vermont residents aged 12 to 25 years who were willing to complete three 10 to 15-minute web-based surveys over a 6-month period. Recruitment was conducted via the following three main mechanisms: (1) web-based recruitment (paid and unpaid), (2) community-based recruitment through partners, and (3) participant referrals via a personalized link. Upon completion of the baseline survey, participants were randomly assigned to one of the following three retention incentive conditions: (1) guaranteed incentive (US $10), (2) lottery incentive (US $50 weekly lottery drawing), and (3) preferred method (guaranteed or lottery). Analyses examined cost per survey start by recruitment source, distribution of demographic characteristics across incentive conditions, and retention by study condition at 3-month and 6-month follow-ups. RESULTS: Over a 10-week period in 2019, we recruited 480 eligible youth (aged 12-17 years) and 1037 eligible young adults (aged 18-25 years) to the Policy and Communication Evaluation (PACE) Vermont Study. Facebook and Instagram advertising produced the greatest number of survey starts (n=2013), followed by posts to a state-wide web-based neighborhood forum (n=822) and Google advertisements (n=749). Retention was 78.11% (1185/1517) at 3 months and 72.18% (1095/1517) at 6 months. Retention was equivalent across all incentive study conditions at both waves, despite a strong stated preference among study participants for the guaranteed payment at baseline. Youth had greater retention than young adults at both waves (wave 2: 395/480, 82.3% vs 790/1037, 76.18%; wave 3: 366/480, 76.3% vs 729/1037, 70.30%). Substance use prevalence in this cohort was similar to national and state-level surveillance estimates for young adults, but was lower than state-level surveillance estimates for youth. Most participants retained at wave 3 provided positive qualitative feedback on their experience. CONCLUSIONS: Our study supports the feasibility of recruiting a web-based cohort of youth and young adults with representation across an entire state to evaluate substance use prevention efforts. Findings suggest that a guaranteed payment immediately upon survey completion coupled with a bonus for completing all survey waves and weekly survey reminders may facilitate retention in a cohort of youth and young adults.


Subject(s)
Health Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Policy Making , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
8.
J Biomech ; 46(6): 1216-20, 2013 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23411116

ABSTRACT

Increased compression of the tibiofemoral joint, due to increased body mass or malalignment, is a risk factor for the onset and progression of osteoarthritis. This work investigates compressive stresses and contact areas in the articular cartilage of the rat tibiofemoral joint during standing with different applied varus loads. Cadaver rat knees underwent loading of the extensors combined with varus loading (0%, 50% or 100% of bodyweight) of the tibiofemoral joint. Articular cartilage contact stress was evaluated using stereophotogrammetric measurements of biplanar radiographs, high-resolution micro-computed tomography and discrete element analysis. Random coefficients regression models were used to analyze the relationship between peak and spatially averaged contact stresses and contact areas as a function of increasing varus loadings. The contact stresses increased linearly in the medial compartment. Peak stress significantly increased 0.042 MPa (p=0.006) and spatially averaged stress significantly increased 0.029 MPa (p=0.045) for each 10% increase in varus loading. There was a trend for a small decrease in contact areas in the lateral compartment with varus loading. This is the first report of the contact stresses in a rat tibiofemoral joints under simulated weight bearing conditions. The 0.42 MPa increase in peak contact stress at the cartilage-cartilage interface of the medial compartment with 100% bodyweight varus load is similar to the reported change in peak contact stress associated with development of symptomatic knee osteoarthritis in humans. Determination of contact stresses in rat tibiofemoral joints allows comparison to contact stresses in humans with the development of osteoarthritis.


Subject(s)
Femur , Joints/physiology , Tibia , Weight-Bearing/physiology , Animals , Cartilage, Articular/physiology , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Stress, Mechanical
9.
J Orthop Res ; 30(9): 1413-22, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22344562

ABSTRACT

We investigated the relationship between the magnitude and duration of chronic compressive load alteration and the development and progression of degenerative changes in the rabbit tibiofemoral joint. Varus loading devices were attached to the hind limb of mature NZW rabbits. Altered compressive loads of 0%, 50%, and 80% body weight (BW) were applied to the tibiofemoral joint for 12 h per day for 12 and 24 weeks (n = 4 animals/group). Compartment-specific assessment of the tibial plateau included histological assessments (articular cartilage, calcified cartilage, and subchondral bone thicknesses, degeneration score, and articular cartilage cellularity) and biomechanical measures (aggregate modulus, permeability, Poisson's ratio). Analyses of variance techniques were used to examine the relationship between each outcome measure with load magnitude and duration as independent variables in the model. Degenerative changes developed in the medial compartment with increased magnitude of compressive loading and included fibrillation, increased degeneration score, and reduced cellularity of the articular cartilage. Increased calcified cartilage thickness was observed in both the medial and lateral compartments following exposure to altered loading of 80% BW for 24 weeks. This work demonstrates that in vivo chronic compressive load alteration to the tibiofemoral joint can initiate progressive macroscopic and histological-based degenerative changes analogous to the early changes occurring in OA.


Subject(s)
Osteoarthritis/etiology , Weight-Bearing , Animals , Cartilage, Articular/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Glycosaminoglycans/metabolism , Male , Osteoarthritis/metabolism , Osteoarthritis/pathology , Rabbits , Time Factors
10.
J Biomech Eng ; 132(9): 094502, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20815650

ABSTRACT

Alterations to joint tissues, including subchondral bone, occur with osteoarthritis. A microindentation technique was developed to determine the local compressive modulus of subchondral bone. This test, in conjunction with a cartilage indentation test at the same location, could evaluate changes of these material properties in both tissues. The accuracy of the technique was determined by applying it to materials of known moduli. The technique was then applied to rat tibial plateaus to characterize the local moduli of the subchondral bone. An established nanoindentation method was adopted to determine the modulus of subchondral bone following penetration of the overlying articular cartilage. Three cycles of repeated loadings were applied (2.452 N, 30 s hold). The slope of the load-displacement response during the unloading portion of the third cycle was used to measure the stiffness. Indentation tests were performed on two polyurethane foams and polymethyl-methacrylate for validation (n=15). Regression analysis was used to compare the moduli with reference values. Subchondral bone moduli of tibial plateaus from Sprague-Dawley rats (n=5) were measured for central and posterior locations of medial and lateral compartments. An analysis of variance was used to analyze the effects of compartment and test location. The measured moduli of the validation materials correlated with the reference values (R(2)=0.993, p=0.05). In rat tibial plateaus, the modulus of the posterior location was significantly greater than the center location (4.03+/-1.00 GPa and 3.35+/-1.16 GPa respectively, p=0.03). The medial compartment was not different from the lateral compartment. This method for measuring the subchondral bone in the same location as articular cartilage allows studies of the changes in these material properties with the onset and progression of osteoarthritis.


Subject(s)
Bone and Bones/physiology , Hardness Tests , Animals , Cartilage, Articular/physiology , Compressive Strength/physiology , Female , Hardness , Joints/pathology , Knee Joint/anatomy & histology , Osteoarthritis/pathology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reference Standards , Regression Analysis , Reproducibility of Results , Tibia/pathology
11.
J Biomech ; 43(12): 2301-8, 2010 Aug 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20488444

ABSTRACT

Methods of producing relevant and quantifiable load alterations in vivo with which to study load-induced cartilage degeneration analogous to osteoarthritis are limited. An animal model was used to investigate the effects of increased chronic loads on articular cartilage. Mature rabbits were randomized into one of three experimentally loaded groups and a fourth unoperated control group. A mechanical-loading device was skeletally fixed to the hind limb of animals in the loaded groups. Engaging the device resulted in an additional load of 0%, +22% or +44% body weight to the medial compartment of the experimental knee, while allowing normal joint function. Following a 12-week loading protocol, a creep-indentation test and needle probe test were used to determine the biphasic material properties and thickness of the cartilage at four locations of each femoral and tibial condyle of the experimental and contralateral limbs. Analyses of covariance were performed to compare outcome measures across the treatment groups. The effect of increased load was site and load-level specific with alterations of material properties and thickness most prominent in the posterior region of the medial compartment of the tibia. At this site, permeability increased 128% and thickness increased 28% in the +44% body weight group relative to the 0% body weight group. This model of altered chronic loading initiated changes in the material properties to the articular cartilage at the sites of increased load over 12-weeks that were consistent with early degenerative changes suggesting that increased tibio-femoral loading may be responsible for the alterations. This work begins to elucidate the chronic-load threshold and the time course of cartilage degeneration at different levels of altered loading.


Subject(s)
Cartilage, Articular/physiopathology , Joints/physiopathology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Disease Models, Animal , Elastic Modulus , Female , Femur/physiopathology , Glycosaminoglycans/metabolism , Hindlimb , Osteoarthritis/etiology , Osteoarthritis/physiopathology , Permeability , Rabbits , Stress, Mechanical , Tibia/physiopathology , Weight-Bearing/physiology
12.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 123: 182-7, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17108424

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Although scoliosis includes wedge deformities of both vertebrae and discs, little is known about the causes of the discal changes, and whether they result from mechanical influences on growth and/or remodelling. METHODS AND MATERIALS: An external apparatus attached to transvertebral pins applied compression and 15 degrees of angulation to each of two adjacent young rat caudal intervertebral discs for 5 weeks (four animals), or for 10 weeks (four animals). Each week, micro-CT scanning documented the in vivo discal wedging. After euthanasia, tail segments (three vertebrae and the 2 angulated discs) were excised and their flexibility was measured over a range of lateral bending. The angle of maximum flexibility was recorded. Then discs were fixed in situ (with the external apparatus in place) and sectioned for polarized light microscopy. RESULTS: The disc-wedging deformity averaged 15 degrees initially, it averaged 20 degrees after 5 weeks, and then reduced to 10 degrees (in 10 week animals). The lateral bending flexibility showed a distinct maximum at an average of 1.1 degrees from the in vivo position in the 5-week animals, indicating structural remodeling of the discs almost to the deformed geometry. The 10-week animals had maximum flexibility at 1.4 degrees from the in vivo position (no significant difference between 5 and 10-week animals.) Collagen crimp angles [Cassidy et al., Conn Tiss Res 1989, 23:75-88] were not significantly different between convex and concave sides, again suggesting that remodeling had occurred. CONCLUSIONS: In a mechanically induced scoliosis deformity in skeletally immature rats, the intervertebral discs underwent remodeling within 5 weeks. This indicates that this animal model is suitable for studying adaptive wedging changes in human scoliosis.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Intervertebral Disc , Animals , Models, Animal , Rats , Stress, Mechanical , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , United States
13.
J Biomech ; 39(12): 2331-7, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16168420

ABSTRACT

The material properties of articular cartilage in the rabbit tibial plateau were determined using biphasic indentation creep tests. Cartilage specimens from matched-pair hind limbs of rabbits approximately 4 months of age and greater than 12 months of age were tested on two locations within each compartment using a custom built materials testing apparatus. A three-way ANOVA was used to determine the effect of leg, compartment, and test location on the material properties (aggregate modulus, permeability, and Poisson's ratio) and thickness of the cartilage for each set of specimens. While no differences were observed in cartilage properties between the left and right legs, differences between compartments were found in each set of specimens. For cartilage from the adolescent group, values for aggregate modulus were 40% less in the medial compartment compared to the lateral compartment, while values for permeability and thickness were greater in the medial compartment compared to the lateral compartment (57% and 30%, respectively). Values for Poisson's ratio were 19% less in the medial compartment compared to the lateral compartment. There was also a strong trend for thickness to differ between test locations. Similar findings were observed for cartilage from the mature group with values for permeability and thickness being greater in the medial compartment compared to the lateral compartment (66% and 34%, respectively). Values for Poisson's ratio were 22% less in the medial compartment compared to the lateral compartment.


Subject(s)
Cartilage, Articular , Tibia , Animals , Elasticity , Permeability , Rabbits , Stress, Mechanical
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