BAPS in Botswana: The Thotloetso Trial (BOTS)
HIV Infections, Smoking Cessation, Smoking
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for HIV Infections focused on measuring Botswana, Smoking cessation, BAPS, Counseling, HIV
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- >18 years old
- Smoking cigarettes daily for the past 30 days
- HIV+ with HIV viral load of <1000 copies/mL, obtained within the 6 months prior to enrollment
- Receiving HIV care at Infectious Diseases Care Clinics (IDCCs) in and around Gaborone
- Able to communicate in English OR Setswana and provide written informed consent
- Planning on residing in the geographic area for at least the next 7 months
Exclusion Criteria:
- Cognitive deficits that impair their ability to provide informed consent
- Current untreated and unstable diagnosis of alcohol dependence (if past use and stable for >30 days, eligible)
- Psychosis
- Use of chewing tobacco, snuff or snus
- Recent , current, or planned use (next 7 months) of nicotine substitutes or smoking cessation treatments
Sites / Locations
- University of BotswanaRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Placebo Comparator
Experimental
Standard
BAPS
Eligible patients will be randomized to one of the treatment arms, which will involve 5 phone-delivered counseling sessions over a 9 week treatment phase. SC will be based on the 2008 PHS Clinical Practice Guideline (Fiore et al., 2008) and on SC in our ongoing two-site trials (R01DA025078; R01CA165001) This intervention arm will begin with a "pre-quit" session designed to help participants prepare for their Target Quit Day (TDQ). The TQD session will occur at week 1. The SC arm will focus on self-monitoring, identifying smoking triggers and alternative trigger management strategies, relaxation, social support for non-smoking, relapse prevention, and homework. The pre-quit session prepares participants for their TQD by reviewing their experience with quitting, beliefs about smoking/quitting, perceived barriers to cessation, and creating a quit plan to identify smoking triggers and implement alternative strategies to manage those triggers without smoking.
Key components of BAPS include activity monitoring and rewarding activity scheduling, assessment of personal goals and values, assessment and altering of avoidance behavior and other maladaptive coping strategies, and contingency management. BAPS focuses on reducing stress pile-up and loss of pleasure that accompanies the cessation process and on identifying and establishing environmental/social changes to promote abstinence. BAPS addresses smoking as a behavior that prevents and restricts opportunities for contact with healthy rewarding behaviors. These changes are achieved through altering daily routines previously associated with smoking in ways that increase pleasure and mastery across life domains, reducing rumination, and increasing behavioral skills to prevent return to smoking as a means of avoiding stressors.