@Article{info:doi/10.2196/25926, author="Mhende, Josephine and Bell, Sharrill A and Cottrell-Daniels, Cherell and Luong, Jackie and Streiff, Micah and Dannenfelser, Mark and Hayat, Matthew J and Spears, Claire Adams", title="Mobile Delivery of Mindfulness-Based Smoking Cessation Treatment Among Low-Income Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial", journal="JMIR Form Res", year="2021", month="Jul", day="23", volume="5", number="7", pages="e25926", keywords="acceptability; addiction; African American; cessation; COVID-19; feasibility; income; low socioeconomic status; mHealth; mindfulness; minority; smoking; SMS; text messaging; treatment", abstract="Background: Smoking is the leading cause of premature death, and low-income adults experience disproportionate burden from tobacco. Mindfulness interventions show promise for improving smoking cessation. A text messaging program ``iQuit Mindfully'' was developed to deliver just-in-time support for quitting smoking among low-income adults. A pilot study of iQuit Mindfully was conducted in spring 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, among low-income and predominantly African American smokers. Objective: This pilot study examined the acceptability and feasibility of delivering Mindfulness-Based Addiction Treatment via mHealth during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: Participants were adult cigarette smokers (n=23), of whom 8 (34.8{\%}) were female, 19 (82.6{\%}) were African American, and 18 (78.3{\%}) had an annual income of