Sadasivam Rajani S, Cutrona Sarah L, Luger Tana M, Volz Erik, Kinney Rebecca, Rao Sowmya R, Allison Jeroan J, Houston Thomas K
Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA.
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2017 Mar 1;19(3):314-323. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntw187.
Although technology-assisted tobacco interventions (TATIs) are effective, they are underused due to recruitment challenges. We tested whether we could successfully recruit smokers to a TATI using peer marketing through a social network (Facebook).
We recruited smokers on Facebook using online advertisements. These recruited smokers (seeds) and subsequent waves of smokers (peer recruits) were provided the Share2Quit peer recruitment Facebook app and other tools. Smokers were incentivized for up to seven successful peer recruitments and had 30 days to recruit from date of registration. Successful peer recruitment was defined as a peer recruited smoker completing the registration on the TATI following a referral. Our primary questions were (1) whether smokers would recruit other smokers and (2) whether peer recruitment would extend the reach of the intervention to harder-to-reach groups, including those not ready to quit and minority smokers.
Overall, 759 smokers were recruited (seeds: 190; peer recruits: 569). Fifteen percent (n = 117) of smokers successfully recruited their peers (seeds: 24.7%; peer recruits: 7.7%) leading to four recruitment waves. Compared to seeds, peer recruits were less likely to be ready to quit (peer recruits 74.2% vs. seeds 95.1%), more likely to be male (67.1% vs. 32.9%), and more likely to be African American (23.8% vs. 10.8%) (p < .01 for all comparisons).
Peer marketing quadrupled our engaged smokers and enriched the sample with not-ready-to-quit and African American smokers. Peer recruitment is promising, and our study uncovered several important challenges for future research.
This study demonstrates the successful recruitment of smokers to a TATI using a Facebook-based peer marketing strategy. Smokers on Facebook were willing and able to recruit other smokers to a TATI, yielding a large and diverse population of smokers.
尽管技术辅助烟草干预措施(TATI)有效,但由于招募方面的挑战,其使用不足。我们测试了能否通过社交网络(Facebook)利用同伴营销成功招募吸烟者参与TATI。
我们在Facebook上使用在线广告招募吸烟者。为这些招募到的吸烟者(种子用户)以及后续几波吸烟者(同伴招募者)提供Share2Quit同伴招募Facebook应用程序和其他工具。吸烟者若成功进行多达七次同伴招募可获得激励,且自注册之日起有30天时间进行招募。成功的同伴招募定义为被同伴招募的吸烟者在收到推荐后完成TATI注册。我们的主要问题是:(1)吸烟者是否会招募其他吸烟者;(2)同伴招募是否会将干预措施的覆盖范围扩大到更难接触到的群体,包括那些尚未准备好戒烟的吸烟者和少数族裔吸烟者。
总体而言,共招募到759名吸烟者(种子用户:190名;同伴招募者:569名)。15%(n = 117)的吸烟者成功招募了同伴(种子用户:24.7%;同伴招募者:7.7%),形成了四个招募波次。与种子用户相比,同伴招募者准备好戒烟的可能性较小(同伴招募者为74.2%,种子用户为95.1%),男性比例更高(67.1%对32.9%),非裔美国人比例更高(23.8%对10.8%)(所有比较的p值均<0.01)。
同伴营销使参与的吸烟者数量增加了四倍,并使样本中纳入了尚未准备好戒烟的吸烟者和非裔美国吸烟者。同伴招募很有前景,我们的研究也发现了未来研究的几个重要挑战。
本研究证明了使用基于Facebook的同伴营销策略成功招募吸烟者参与TATI。Facebook上的吸烟者愿意且能够招募其他吸烟者参与TATI,从而产生了大量且多样化的吸烟者群体。