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Preventing Relapse to Smoking Among Prisoners After Release: Developing and Piloting a Complex Health Intervention
Prisoners experience huge health inequalities, and their exceptionally high smoking prevalence (five times the national average) contributes significantly to their high mortality. Since the introduction of smoke-free polices across Her Majesty's Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) in England and Wales, prisoners are now obliged to abstain from smoking while held in prison. This represents a unique opportunity to promote lifelong cessation in this highly disadvantaged and marginalised group. However, evidence suggests most prisoners intend to resume smoking as soon as possible after release. A systematic review of prison smoke-free polices worldwide concluded that there was a need for new research to identify effective strategies to reduce relapse in these individuals.
The primary objective of this study will be to develop and pilot test the feasibility and acceptability of an intervention to help prevent prisoners relapse to smoking after release. The study will work in accordance with the Medical Research Council (MRC) framework for developing and evaluating complex interventions. The Preventing Relapse tO Smoking among PrisonErs after Release (PROSPER) study consists of three key Phases: 1. Document the support provided to manage nicotine addiction during imprisonment and in the periods immediately before and after release; establish the extent to which prisoners intentionally resume or unintentionally relapse to smoking after release; and obtain views on how relapse might be prevented. 2. Drawing on current literature and findings from Phase 1, develop and design an prototype intervention to prevent smoking relapse after release. 3. To pilot the designed prototype intervention and conduct a process evaluation to inform the development of further work in this area. The research will be carried out in three prisons in the East Midlands. The main duties will include recruitment of participants (HMPPS staff members and prisoners), data collection, data analysis, assist with intervention development and refining related intervention materials/resources, co-facilitate Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) groups, contribute to the ethical application for the pilot intervention, and preparation of manuscripts for peer-review publication.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
MALE
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
University of Nottingham, School of Medicine
Nottingham, Please Select, United Kingdom
Start Date
August 8, 2019
Primary Completion Date
May 1, 2023
Completion Date
December 30, 2023
Last Updated
February 28, 2024
40
ACTUAL participants
Not yet developed
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
University of Nottingham
Collaborators
NCT06372899
NCT07441928
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