Literature DB >> 16829777

Nursing's involvement in tobacco control: historical perspective and vision for the future.

Ruth E Malone1.   

Abstract

There is little evidence that nursing organizations have played a major leadership role in addressing tobacco control at the political level, and none have addressed collectively, in any sustained way, the role of the tobacco industry, the primary vector of the tobacco disease epidemic. The aims of this article are (a) to explore what accounts for organized nursing's relative quiescence about tobacco industry and (b) to elucidate why a nursing voice would be especially effective in addressing the industry as a vector of the tobacco disease epidemic. Drawing on the internal tobacco industry documents research, and incorporating a critical theoretical perspective on education, research, and practice, it is argued that tobacco cessation cannot be viewed solely as an individual problem but must be understood in a sociopolitical context and promoting a nursing agendum on cessation research and practice requires educating (and energizing) nurses on the sociopolitics of tobacco. Because of nurses' numbers, class status, political capital, and moral authority in society, they are the group of health professionals whose voices are needed urgently at this historical moment to help avert the global tobacco epidemic. The Nightingales is an example of a nursing group involved in activism against the tobacco industry, applying findings from research on the industry to engage nurses in tobacco control activism, research, and education. The cessation research agenda should include research on the tobacco industry and how its activities influence cessation, how political activism influences cessation, and how critical education may advance cessation research, policies, and practices.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16829777     DOI: 10.1097/00006199-200607001-00008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurs Res        ISSN: 0029-6562            Impact factor:   2.381


  3 in total

1.  Training nurses in the treatment of tobacco use and dependence: pre- and post-training results.

Authors:  Christine E Sheffer; Claudia Barone; Michael E Anders
Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  2010-10-08       Impact factor: 3.187

2.  Nursing education and beliefs towards tobacco cessation and control: a cross- sectional national survey (GHPSS) among nursing students in Greece.

Authors:  Evridiki Patelarou; Constantine I Vardavas; Penelope Ntzilepi; Charles W Warren; Anastasia Barbouni; Jenny Kremastinou; Gregory N Connolly; Panagiotis Behrakis
Journal:  Tob Induc Dis       Date:  2011-05-06       Impact factor: 2.600

3.  Historical Perspectives of the Causation of Lung Cancer: Nursing as a Bystander.

Authors:  Tracy A Ruegg
Journal:  Glob Qual Nurs Res       Date:  2015-05-14
  3 in total

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