JMIR Formative Research (Aug 2024)

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

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

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/58121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
p. e58121

Abstract

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BackgroundIndividuals living in rural communities experience substantial geographic and infrastructure barriers to attaining health equity in accessing tobacco use cessation treatment. Social media and other digital platforms offer promising avenues to improve access and overcome engagement challenges in tobacco cessation efforts. Research has also shown a positive correlation between faith-based involvement and a lower likelihood of smoking, which can be used to engage rural communities in these interventions. ObjectiveThis study aimed to develop and beta test a social intervention prototype using a Facebook (Meta Platforms, Inc) group specifically designed for rural smokers seeking evidence-based smoking cessation resources. MethodsWe designed a culturally aligned and faith-aligned Facebook group intervention, FaithCore, tailored to engage rural people who smoke in smoking cessation resources. Both intervention content and engagement strategies were guided by community-based participatory research principles. Given the intervention’s focus on end users, that is, rural people who smoked, we conducted a beta test to assess any technical or usability issues of this intervention before any future trials for large-scale implementation. ResultsNo critical beta test technical and usability issues were noted. Besides, the FaithCore intervention was helpful, easy to understand, and achieved its intended goals. Notably, 90% (9/10) of the participants reported that they tried quitting smoking, while 90% (9/10) reported using or seeking cessation resources discussed within the group. ConclusionsThis study shows that social media platform with culturally aligned and faith-aligned content and engagement strategies delivered by trained moderators are promising for smoking cessation interventions in rural communities. Our future step is to conduct a large pilot trial to evaluate the intervention’s effectiveness on smoking cessation outcomes.