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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research

Date Submitted: Mar 6, 2024
Date Accepted: Jul 10, 2024

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Beta Test of a Christian Faith-Based Facebook Intervention for Smoking Cessation in Rural Communities (FaithCore): Development and Usability Study

Sharma P, Tranby B, Kamath C, Brockman T, Lenhart N, Quade B, Abuan N, Halom M, Staples J, Young C, Brewer L, Patten C

Beta Test of a Christian Faith-Based Facebook Intervention for Smoking Cessation in Rural Communities (FaithCore): Development and Usability Study

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e58121

DOI: 10.2196/58121

PMID: 39186365

PMCID: 11384179

Development and Beta Test of a Faith-Based Facebook Intervention for Smoking Cessation in Rural Communities (FAITH-CORE)

  • Pravesh Sharma; 
  • Brianna Tranby; 
  • Celia Kamath; 
  • Tabetha Brockman; 
  • Ned Lenhart; 
  • Brian Quade; 
  • Nate Abuan; 
  • Martin Halom; 
  • Jamie Staples; 
  • Colleen Young; 
  • LaPrincess Brewer; 
  • Christi Patten

ABSTRACT

Background:

Rural communities experience significant health inequities regarding tobacco use and access to cessation treatment due to geographic barriers and infrastructure limitations. Social media and other digital platforms offer promising avenues to improve access and overcome engagement challenges in tobacco cessation efforts for rural populations.

Objective:

This study aimed to develop and beta-test a social media intervention prototype (FaithCore) delivered through a Facebook group specifically designed for rural smokers seeking evidence-based smoking cessation resources.

Methods:

We developed a culturally and faith-aligned Facebook group intervention (FaithCore) tailored to promote the use of smoking cessation resources among rural smokers. The principles of community-based participatory research (CBPR) informed the intervention content and engagement strategies. A beta test was conducted with a sample of rural smokers to assess the intervention's usability, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy.

Results:

The beta-test results indicated that the FaithCore intervention was perceived as helpful, easy to understand, and effective in achieving its intended goals. Notably, 90% of participants reported attempting to quit smoking, and 90% reported utilizing or seeking the cessation resources discussed within the group.

Conclusions:

This study suggests that social media group interventions, incorporating culturally and faith-aligned content and engagement strategies delivered by trained moderators, hold promise for promoting smoking cessation in rural communities. Future research will involve a large pilot trial to evaluate the intervention's effectiveness on smoking cessation outcomes.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Sharma P, Tranby B, Kamath C, Brockman T, Lenhart N, Quade B, Abuan N, Halom M, Staples J, Young C, Brewer L, Patten C

Beta Test of a Christian Faith-Based Facebook Intervention for Smoking Cessation in Rural Communities (FaithCore): Development and Usability Study

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e58121

DOI: 10.2196/58121

PMID: 39186365

PMCID: 11384179

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