Project Summary
Smoking is the number one cause of preventable death in the United States (U.S.). Approximately 14% of U.S.
adults are current cigarette smokers, and about 7 out of 10 smokers report a desire to quit. Unfortunately, even
among the best smoking cessation interventions, relapse is the most likely outcome. Internet-based
contingency management (CM) is a remotely-delivered, evidence-based intervention that involves the
provision of financial incentives contingent on objective evidence of smoking abstinence. Internet-based CM
has been shown to be both acceptable and highly efficacious, so research efforts are now focused on making
the intervention scalable and sustainable by exploring non-monetary incentives for abstinence. About 81% of
U.S. adults own a smartphone and 90% of the time people spend on their phones involves using applications
(apps) for sending messages, playing mobile games, social networking, shopping, and reading. Given the
widespread use of mobile phone apps, and their variety, they may serve as an ideal personalized, low-
cost, non-monetary incentive for smoking abstinence that would be relevant to a broad audience in the
context of a mobile CM intervention. App blocking programs prevent users from accessing certain apps and
they are already available and in high demand; however, none of the existing app-blocking programs are
designed to promote health behavior by requiring objective evidence of the target behavior (in this case
smoking abstinence) before unblocking the app. The aims of the current proposal are to (1) develop and (2)
evaluate Re-Connect, a personalized, smartphone app-blocking-based CM intervention that would limit
participants’ access to high-valued, but non-essential (e.g., social media, shopping, games), phone apps until
objective evidence of smoking abstinence has been verified. First, we will develop and test Re-Connect using a
dynamic systems development, iterative testing, approach involving treatment-seeking smokers at each stage,
conducting usability tests via focus groups and feedback sessions. Second, we will randomly assign treatment-
seeking smokers (N=50) to either: (1) abstinent contingent (AC) where tokens for unblocking apps can be
earned contingent on objective evidence of smoking abstinence (CO < 6ppm), or (2) submission contingent
(SC) where tokens can be earned contingent on submitting CO videos, but independent of quitting during a 6-
month observation period. Primary outcomes of feasibility and acceptability of Re-Connect will be assessed
via (a) enrollment, (b) duration of use, (c) reasons for discontinuation, and (d) participant-reported acceptability.
Primary outcomes of preliminary efficacy will be assessed via (e) percent of negative daily CO samples, and
(f) 7-day point prevalence of self-reported smoking status, verified by CO, between the two groups. Our team
has extensive experience with mobile CM interventions, technology development, focus groups, single-case
designs, biostatistics, human factors testing, and clinical trial testing, making us ideally positioned to carry out
the proposed proof-of-concept development and testing.