Postpartum Behavioral Sleep Intervention for Smoking Relapse Prevention: A Pilot Trial

Matern Child Health J. 2023 Feb;27(2):272-285. doi: 10.1007/s10995-022-03575-3. Epub 2023 Jan 10.

Abstract

Objectives: Rates of postpartum smoking relapse are high (70-90%) but standard relapse prevention interventions are not effective postpartum. This pilot study evaluated effects of a combined relapse prevention and sleep intervention on sleep and relapse to smoking.

Methods: Twenty-eight postpartum mothers were assigned to the intervention group-combined relapse prevention and behavioral sleep intervention-or to the comparison group-relapse prevention alone. Questionnaires and actigraphy were completed at baseline (1-week postpartum), post-treatment (8-weeks postpartum), and follow-up (12-weeks postpartum). Sleep diaries were completed weekly for the first 8 weeks postpartum and once at 12 weeks postpartum. To corroborate abstinence, CO levels in expired air were measured weekly for the first 8 weeks postpartum and at follow-up. Timeline Followback (TLFB) and salivary cotinine analysis were conducted at baseline, post-treatment, and follow-up to assess for nicotine and other substance use (TLFB) and to further corroborate abstinence (salivary cotinine analysis).

Results: The sleep intervention lengthened maternal nighttime actigraphic sleep by an average of 48 minutes nightly; lengthened the longest bout of consolidated actigraphic sleep by an average of 42 minutes nightly; increased actigraphic sleep efficiency into the healthy range (> 85%); and lowered subjective ratings of sleep disturbance (ps < .05). Findings were inconclusive regarding whether better sleep was associated with abstinence. Post Hoc analyses identified the presence of an additional support person in the home as well as social and emotional support as being positively correlated with smoking abstinence (p < .05; p < .01).

Conclusions for practice: (1) Postpartum sleep can be improved with behavioral interventions in women with a history of smoking. (2) Social-emotional postpartum support is an important factor in preventing smoking relapse for these women.

Keywords: Intervention; Postpartum; Relapse; Sleep; Smoking; Support.

MeSH terms

  • Cotinine*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Pilot Projects
  • Postpartum Period* / psychology
  • Recurrence
  • Secondary Prevention
  • Sleep
  • Smoking / psychology
  • Smoking Prevention

Substances

  • Cotinine