Could cure screen addition
A mobile app with artificial intelligence can sense where and when you might be triggered to light up a cigarette, says University of East Anglia research, which claims the interfering machine may make user stop smoking eventually. On the other hand, the constant annoying interventions might encourage users to put their phone away and switch it off. Either way, researchers at the University of East Anglia have found a way for smart phone users to deal with one of their addictions.
The app that Quit Sense is pioneering is the world’s first Artificial Intelligence (AI) stop smoking app which detects when people are entering a location they used to smoke in, such as Chinatown in London (pictured), which was once a popular destination for UK technology journalists on a Friday night. The AI application then provides support to help manage people’s specific smoking triggers in that location.
Funding for the Quit Sense app has come from the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) and the Medical Research Council. A study published today shows how the new app helped more smokers to quit than people who were only offered online NHS support. The team hope that by helping people manage trigger situations, the new app will help more smokers to quit.
“Quit attempts often fail because urges to smoke are triggered by spending time in places where people used to smoke. This might be while at the pub or at work, for example,” said lead researcher Prof Felix Naughton, from UEA’s School of Health Sciences. “Other than using medication, there are no existing ways of providing support to help smokers manage these types of situations and urges as they happen.
Dr Chloë Siegele-Brown from the University of Cambridge built the app and described the rationale of Quit Sense using AI to learns about the times, locations and triggers of previous smoking events to decide when and what messages to display to the users to help them manage urges to smoke in real time.
Prof Naughton did not think that reverse psychology might be at play in this game of cat and mouse. “Helping people attempting to quit smoking to learn about and manage these situations is a new way of increasing a smoker’s chances of quitting successfully,” said Naughton.
The research team carried out a randomised controlled trial involving 209 smokers who were recruited via social media. They were sent links by text message to access their allocated treatment, all participants received a link to NHS online stop smoking support but only half received the Quit Sense app in addition.
Six months later, the participants were asked to complete follow-up measures online and those reporting to have quit smoking were asked to post back a saliva sample to verify their abstinence. “We found that when smokers were offered the Quit Sense app, three-quarters installed it and those who started a quit attempt with the app used it for around one month on average,” said Professor Naughton, “We also found that four times more people who were offered the app quit smoking six months later compared to those only offered online NHS support.”
The research team note that one limitation of this relatively small-scale study was that less than half of the people who reported quitting smoking returned a saliva sample to verify that they had quit smoking. And more research is needed to provide a better estimate of the effectiveness of the app.
“Technology and smartphones have a role to play in driving down smoking rates, which is why I’ve set out our plans to explore the use of QR codes in cigarette pack inserts to take people to stop-smoking support,” said UK Health Minister Neil O’Brien. “Making better use of technology – alongside the world’s first national ‘swap to stop’ scheme and financial incentives for pregnant women alongside behavioural support – will help us to meet our smokefree ambition by 2030, reduce the number of smoking-illnesses needing to be treated, and cut NHS waiting times.”
This study was led by the University of East Anglia in collaboration with researchers from the University of Cambridge, the Norwich Clinical Trials Unit, the University of Nottingham, King’s College London, University College London, and Imperial College London.
An automated, online feasibility randomised controlled trial of a Just-In-Time Adaptive Intervention for smoking cessation (Quit Sense) is published in the journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research.