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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan B. Bricker is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan B. Bricker.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2014

Randomized, controlled pilot trial of a smartphone app for smoking cessation using acceptance and commitment therapy.

Jonathan B. Bricker; Kristin E. Mull; Julie A. Kientz; Roger Vilardaga; Laina Mercer; Katrina J. Akioka; Jaimee L. Heffner

BACKGROUND There is a dual need for (1) innovative theory-based smartphone applications for smoking cessation and (2) controlled trials to evaluate their efficacy. Accordingly, this study tested the feasibility, acceptability, preliminary efficacy, and mechanism of behavioral change of an innovative smartphone-delivered acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) application for smoking cessation vs. an application following US Clinical Practice Guidelines. METHOD Adult participants were recruited nationally into the double-blind randomized controlled pilot trial (n=196) that compared smartphone-delivered ACT for smoking cessation application (SmartQuit) with the National Cancer Institutes application for smoking cessation (QuitGuide). RESULTS We recruited 196 participants in two months. SmartQuit participants opened their application an average of 37.2 times, as compared to 15.2 times for QuitGuide participants (p<0001). The overall quit rates were 13% in SmartQuit vs. 8% in QuitGuide (OR=2.7; 95% CI=0.8-10.3). Consistent with ACTs theory of change, among those scoring low (below the median) on acceptance of cravings at baseline (n=88), the quit rates were 15% in SmartQuit vs. 8% in QuitGuide (OR=2.9; 95% CI=0.6-20.7). CONCLUSIONS ACT is feasible to deliver by smartphone application and shows higher engagement and promising quit rates compared to an application that follows US Clinical Practice Guidelines. As results were limited by the pilot design (e.g., small sample), a full-scale efficacy trial is now needed.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2007

Parental Smoking and Adolescent Smoking Stages: The Role of Parents’ Current and Former Smoking, and Family Structure

Roy Otten; Rutger C. M. E. Engels; Monique O.M. Van De Ven; Jonathan B. Bricker

This study examined the role of parents’ current and former smoking in predicting adolescent smoking acquisition stages. Participants were 7,426 students from 33 schools in the Netherlands. Participants’ survey data were gathered at baseline and at two-year follow-up. Logistic regression models showed that parental smoking status was not only predictive of transitions from never smoking to trying smoking, monthly smoking, or daily smoking, but also of the progression from trying smoking to daily smoking. Further, although parental former smoking was weaker associated with progressive adolescent smoking transitions than current parental smoking, however absence of parental smoking history was most preventive. Compared to the situation in which both parents had never smoked, cessation of parental smoking after the child was born was associated with an increased risk for children to smoke. Adolescents living in a single-parent family were at greater risk of smoking than adolescents living in an intact family with both mother and father. In sum, the role of parental smoking is not restricted to smoking onset and is present throughout different phases of the acquisition process. Results support the delayed modeling hypothesis that parental smoking affects the likelihood for children to smoke even when parents quit many years before. Children living in single-parent families are only exposed to the behaviour of one parent; in two-parent families the behaviour from one parent may magnify or buffer the behaviour of the other parent.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2013

Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of Web-Based Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Smoking Cessation

Jonathan B. Bricker; Christopher M. Wyszynski; Bryan A. Comstock; Jaimee L. Heffner

OBJECTIVE Web-based smoking cessation interventions have high reach, but low effectiveness. To address this problem, we conducted a pilot randomized controlled trial of the first web-based acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) intervention for smoking cessation. The aims were to determine design feasibility, user receptivity, effect on 30-day point prevalence quit rate at 3 months post-randomization, and mediation by ACT theory-based processes of acceptance. METHODS Adult participants were recruited nationally into the double-blind randomized controlled pilot trial (N = 222), which compared web-based ACT for smoking cessation (WebQuit.org) with the National Cancer Institutes Smokefree.gov-the U.S. national standard for web-based smoking cessation interventions. RESULTS We recruited 222 participants in 10 weeks. Participants spent significantly longer on the ACT WebQuit.org site per login (18.98 vs. 10.72 min; p = .001) and were more satisfied with the site (74% vs. 42%; p =.002). Using available follow-up data, more than double the fraction of participants in the ACT WebQuit.org arm had quit smoking at the 3-month follow-up (23% vs. 10%; OR = 3.05; 95% CI = 1.01-9.32; p = .050). Eighty percent of this effect was mediated by ACT theory-based increases in total acceptance of physical, cognitive, and emotional cues to smoke (p < .001). CONCLUSIONS The trial design was feasible. Compared with Smokefree.gov, ACT had higher user receptivity and short-term cessation, and strong evidence of theory-based mechanisms of change. While results were promising, they were limited by the pilot design (e.g., limited follow-up), and thus a full-scale efficacy trial is now being conducted.


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2009

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Smoking Cessation: A Preliminary Study of Its Effectiveness in Comparison With Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

Mónica Hernández-López; M. Carmen Luciano; Jonathan B. Bricker; Jesús Gil Roales-Nieto; Francisco Montesinos

This controlled preliminary trial determined the feasibility and initial effectiveness of a promising behavioral intervention for smoking: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). In a quasi-experimental design, the ACT intervention condition used metaphors and experiential exercises focused on personal values to motivate quitting smoking and enhancing the willingness to experience internal cues to smoke (e.g., urges) and abstinence-related internal distress. The comparison condition was cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)--the current standard in behavioral intervention for smoking cessation. Each treatment was delivered in seven weekly 90-min sessions in a group format to 81 (43 in ACT; 38 in CBT) adult smokers. Results show that the ACT treatment was as feasible as the CBT treatment. They also demonstrate promising evidence of ACTs effectiveness: 30.2% intent-to-treat biochemically-supported 30-day point prevalence at twelve month follow-up, compared with 13.2% in the CBT condition (odds ratio = 5.13; p = .02). Replication in a well-powered, randomized, controlled trial is now needed.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2009

Group-Randomized Trial of a Proactive, Personalized Telephone Counseling Intervention for Adolescent Smoking Cessation

Arthur V. Peterson; Kathleen A. Kealey; Sue L. Mann; Patrick M. Marek; Evette Ludman; Jingmin Liu; Jonathan B. Bricker

BACKGROUND The Hutchinson Study of High School Smoking randomized trial was designed to rigorously evaluate a proactive, personalized telephone counseling intervention for adolescent smoking cessation. METHODS Fifty randomly selected Washington State high schools were randomized to the experimental or control condition. High school junior smokers were proactively identified (N = 2151). Trained counselors delivered the motivational interviewing plus cognitive behavioral skills training telephone intervention to smokers in experimental schools during their senior year of high school. Participants were followed up, with 88.8% participation, to outcome ascertainment more than 1 year after random assignment. The main outcome was 6-months prolonged abstinence from smoking. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS The intervention increased the percentage who achieved 6-month prolonged smoking abstinence among all smokers (21.8% in the experimental condition vs 17.7% in the control condition, difference = 4.0%, 95% confidence interval [CI] = -0.2 to 8.1, P = .06) and in particular among daily smokers (10.1% vs 5.9%, difference = 4.1%, 95% CI = 0.8 to 7.1, P = .02). There was also generally strong evidence of intervention impact for 3-month, 1-month, and 7-day abstinence and duration since last cigarette (P = .09, .015, .01, and .03, respectively). The intervention effect was strongest among male daily smokers and among female less-than-daily smokers. CONCLUSIONS Proactive identification and recruitment of adolescents via public high schools can produce a high level of intervention reach; a personalized motivational interviewing plus cognitive behavioral skills training counseling intervention delivered by counselor-initiated telephone calls is effective in increasing teen smoking cessation; and both daily and less-than-daily teen smokers participate in and benefit from telephone-based smoking cessation intervention.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2010

Telephone-delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for adult smoking cessation: A feasibility study

Jonathan B. Bricker; Sue L. Mann; Patrick M. Marek; Jingmin Liu; Arthur V. Peterson

BACKGROUND Quitline smoking cessation counseling results in a mere 12% success rate. Testing of new telephone-delivered cessation counseling approaches is needed. OBJECTIVE Determine the feasibility of the first telephone-delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) intervention for smoking cessation. DESIGN Fourteen adults (57% racial/ethnic minority, 8/14) in a single-arm study. Counselor proactively delivered a 5-session (90-min total) ACT telephone intervention for smoking cessation. Hypothesized ACT processes were self-reported at baseline and posttreatment. Smoking status was self-reported at baseline, 20-day posttreatment (93% retention, 13/14), and 12-month posttreatment (93% retention, 13/14). RESULTS (a) Delivery length and duration: average of 3.5 calls and 81.9-min intervention duration. (b) Receptivity: 100% (14/14) felt respected by the counselor, 86% (12/14) said that intervention was a good fit, and 93% (13/14) said that intervention helped them quit. (c) ACT processes: (i) acceptance of physical cravings, emotions, and thoughts that cue smoking increased from baseline to posttreatment (p = .001, p = .038, and p = .085, respectively) and (ii) commitment to quitting increased from baseline to posttreatment (p = .01). (4) Intent-to-treat cessation outcomes: (i) at 20-day posttreatment, 43% (6/14) had not smoked the day of the survey and 29% (4/14) had not smoked in past 7 days and (ii) at 12-month posttreatment, 29% (4/14) had not smoked at all in past 12 months. These quit rates are over double the 12% quit rates of current standard telephone counseling. CONCLUSION Telephone-delivered ACT shows promise for smoking cessation and warrants future testing in a well-powered randomized trial.


American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse | 2015

Feature-level analysis of a novel smartphone application for smoking cessation

Jaimee L. Heffner; Roger Vilardaga; Laina Mercer; Julie A. Kientz; Jonathan B. Bricker

Abstract Background: Currently, there are over 400 smoking cessation smartphone apps available, downloaded an estimated 780,000 times per month. No prior studies have examined how individuals engage with specific features of cessation apps and whether use of these features is associated with quitting. Objectives: Using data from a pilot trial of a novel smoking cessation app, we examined: (i) the 10 most-used app features, and (ii) prospective associations between feature usage and quitting. Methods: Participants (n = 76) were from the experimental arm of a randomized, controlled pilot trial of an app for smoking cessation called “SmartQuit,” which includes elements of both Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and traditional cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Utilization data were automatically tracked during the 8-week treatment phase. Thirty-day point prevalence smoking abstinence was assessed at 60-day follow-up. Results: The most-used features – quit plan, tracking, progress, and sharing – were mostly CBT. Only two of the 10 most-used features were prospectively associated with quitting: viewing the quit plan (p = 0.03) and tracking practice of letting urges pass (p = 0.03). Tracking ACT skill practice was used by fewer participants (n = 43) but was associated with cessation (p = 0.01). Conclusions: In this exploratory analysis without control for multiple comparisons, viewing a quit plan (CBT) as well as tracking practice of letting urges pass (ACT) were both appealing to app users and associated with successful quitting. Aside from these features, there was little overlap between a feature’s popularity and its prospective association with quitting. Tests of causal associations between feature usage and smoking cessation are now needed.


Addictive Behaviors | 2013

Overcoming recruitment challenges of web-based interventions for tobacco use: The case of web-based acceptance and commitment therapy for smoking cessation☆☆☆

Jaimee L. Heffner; Christopher M. Wyszynski; Bryan A. Comstock; Laina Mercer; Jonathan B. Bricker

Web-based behavioral interventions for substance use are being developed at a rapid pace, yet there is a dearth of information regarding the most effective methods for recruiting participants into web-based intervention trials. In this paper, we describe our successful recruitment of participants into a pilot trial of web-based Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for smoking cessation and compare traditional and web-based methods of recruitment in terms of their effects on baseline participant characteristics, association with study retention and treatment outcome, yield, and cost-effectiveness. Over a 10-week period starting June 15, 2010, we recruited 222 smokers for a web-based smoking cessation study using a variety of recruitment methods. The largest portion of randomized participants were recruited through Google AdWords (36%), followed by medical Internet media (23%), standard media (14%), word of mouth (12%), broadcast emails (11%), and social media (6%). Recruitment source was not related to baseline participant characteristics, 3-month data retention, or 30-day point prevalence smoking abstinence at the 3-month outcome assessment. Cost per randomized participant ranged from


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2014

Randomized Trial of Telephone-Delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Versus Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Smoking Cessation: A Pilot Study

Jonathan B. Bricker; Terry Bush; Susan M. Zbikowski; Laina Mercer; Jaimee L. Heffner

5.27/participant for word of mouth to


Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy | 2011

Comparison of motivational interviewing with acceptance and commitment therapy: a conceptual and clinical review.

Jonathan B. Bricker; Sean Tollison

172.76/participant for social media, with a mean cost of

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Jaimee L. Heffner

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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M. Robyn Andersen

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Kathleen A. Kealey

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Patrick M. Marek

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Roy Otten

Radboud University Nijmegen

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