Bricker’s colleague Dr. Jaimee Heffner, who just launched her own study for smokers with depression using a Fred Hutch smartphone app called Actify, said people can often be harsh and judgmental about patients who smoke.
“It [would] help if people could be more understanding and more compassionate toward cancer patients who are struggling to quit,” she said. “I’ve read comments posted on our Facebook ads for studies like ‘Please quit because I hate smokers’ or ‘I would think having cancer would be enough to make them quit.’”
People assume quitting is easier after learning you have cancer, she said, but the reality is, it’s “tremendously difficult” to stop during highly stressful times.
“People need comfort when they’re hurting,” she said. “And if smoking has been a long-term source of comfort, they may feel like they need it even more.”
What they don’t need, she said, is shame and isolation on top of everything else. Research has even shown that stigmatizing smokers does not motivate them to quit, Bricker said, another reason why he wants to design an app to help this vulnerable population.
“The app will not judge you,” he said. “You can always rely on the app for compassionate, confidential support. There would be a virtual coach that walks you through the program and helps you quit, someone caring and experienced and not judgmental. The privacy and confidentiality and intimacy of an app would make it easier for patients to access and accept the treatment.”
Baby steps to breathing easier
Bricker’s interviews with patients, doctors and nurses — as well as recent funding from a CVS Health Foundation grant — will help him create the app, which he calls Quit2Heal. He hopes to have it available for a clinical trial by spring 2018. [Editor's note: The clinical trial of the Quit2Heal app is now open and enrolling participants. For more information visit www.quit2heal.org.]
“Cancer patients feel very alone in the process of trying to quit,” he said. “Our app provides tools on how to cope with shame and teaches self-compassion and how to be kind to yourself. That’s just one piece of it. We’re also developing tools to help these people cope with anxiety and depressed thoughts and help guide them towards activities that are appropriate for cancer patients like mild exercise and walking.”
Manders said no matter how it’s done, quitting smoking after a cancer diagnosis is daunting but doable, even if it’s only for the duration of treatment.
“Trying to quit a coping skill or replace it with another when you’re facing the most stressful time in your life is really hard to do,” she said. “Nonetheless people make courageous attempts to quit — even if they don’t quit forever. They make a valiant effort to get through their treatment as a nonsmoker, which is still very helpful.”