Intervention targeting and retention, engagement and abstinence outcomes among Latino and White users of Smokefree.gov text messaging programmes: a cross-sectional study

BMJ Public Health. 2023;1(1):e000222. doi: 10.1136/bmjph-2023-000222.

Abstract

Background: We examined retention, engagement, and abstinence among Latino users of SmokefreeTXT en Español (SFTXTesp), a Latino-targeted text messaging smoking cessation intervention, and Latino and White users of SmokefreeTXT (SFTXT), a non-targeted intervention.

Methods: Data came from 12281 users (1562 Latino SFTXTesp users and 2301 Latino and 8418 White SFTXT users). We conducted time-to-dropout analyses by race/ethnicity. Using logistic regression, we examined associations between intervention targeting, race/ethnicity, and responses to smoking status prompts, an engagement metric, and self-reported abstinence on quit day, intervention end, and one-month follow-up. Age, gender, census region, smoking frequency, cigarettes smoked per day, prequit time, and number of quit attempts were covariates.

Results: Latinos in SFTXTesp (aOR 0.63) and SFTXT (0.88) were less likely to drop out of the intervention than Whites. SFTXTesp Latino users had higher response rates to smoking prompts than SFTXT Latinos users (aORs 1.35, quit day; 1.84, intervention end; 1.82, one-month follow-up). However, SFTXTesp and SFTXT Latino users had lower response rates than Whites (aORs 0.68, 0.45, quit day; 0.60, 0.30, intervention end; 0.64, 0.33, one-month follow-up). Abstinence was equivalent among Latinos in SFTXTesp and SFTXT interventions, but Latinos using SFTXTesp and SFTXT were less likely to be abstinent than Whites (aORs 0.42, 0.41, quit day; 0.45, 0.37, intervention end; and 0.53, 0.35, one-month follow-up).

Conclusion: Linguistic intervention targeting improved retention and engagement among Latinos, but not abstinence. Latinos had higher retention but lower engagement and abstinence rates than Whites. Cultural targeting may engage Latinos in smoking cessation interventions and improve abstinence.

Keywords: Latinos; health disparities; mhealth; smoking cessation; text messaging intervention.