Design of a randomized tobacco cessation trial among FDNY World Trade Center responders in a lung cancer screening program
David G. Goldfarb, Tyrone Moline, David J. Prezant, Matthew P. Bars, Rachel Zeig-Owens, Theresa Schwartz, Madeline F. Cannon, Brandon Vaeth, Julia H. Arnsten, Mayris P. Webber, Shadi Nahvi

TL;DR
This study tests a new tobacco cessation approach for FDNY responders by integrating opt-out enrollment and personalized feedback into lung cancer screening.
Contribution
The study introduces an Enhanced Care model with opt-out enrollment and biofeedback to improve smoking cessation in a high-risk occupational group.
Findings
Enhanced Care uses opt-out enrollment and biofeedback to increase treatment participation.
The trial evaluates the effectiveness of varenicline preloading and personalized feedback on smoking cessation.
Results may inform scalable strategies for tobacco cessation in occupational and general populations.
Abstract
Cigarette smoking remains the leading preventable cause of death, posing heightened risks for vulnerable populations. World Trade Center (WTC) disaster responders face an elevated burden of respiratory diseases, and despite access to an evidence-based tobacco cessation program, a subset continues to smoke cigarettes. Treatment engagement remains a critical barrier, as many people who smoke fail to enroll in or adhere to programs, particularly when participation requires decisions to actively opt-in to treatment. This randomized controlled trial integrates tobacco treatment into an existing low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) lung cancer screening program and compares the effectiveness of an Enhanced Care intervention with opt-out enrollment and biofeedback to Standard Care with opt-in enrollment and standard treatment. The trial includes retired Fire Department of the City of New York…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · School Health and Nursing Education · Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research
