| Literature DB >> 24991556 |
Giuseppe La Torre1, Rosella Saulle1, Brigid Unim1, Italo Francesco Angelillo2, Vincenzo Baldo3, Margherita Bergomi4, Paolo Cacciari5, Silvana Castaldi6, Giuseppe Del Corno7, Francesco Di Stanislao8, Augusto Panà9, Pasquale Gregorio10, Orazio Claudio Grillo11, Paolo Grossi12, Francesco La Rosa13, Nicola Nante14, Maria Pavia15, Gabriele Pelissero16, Michele Quarto17, Walter Ricciardi18, Gabriele Romano19, Francesco Saverio Schioppa20, Roberto Fallico21, Roberta Siliquini22, Maria Triassi23, Francesco Vitale24, Antonio Boccia1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare professionals have an important role to play both as advisers-influencing smoking cessation-and as role models. However, many of them continue to smoke. The aims of this study were to examine smoking prevalence, knowledge, attitudes, and behaviours among four cohorts physicians specializing in public health, according to the Global Health Profession Students Survey (GHPSS) approach.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24991556 PMCID: PMC4065712 DOI: 10.1155/2014/516734
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Characteristics of the sample.
| Sociodemographic variables | Frequencies | Nonsmokers | Current smokers |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | ||||
| <30 | 141 (36.3) | 105 (74.5) | 36 (25.5) | 0.1∧ |
| ≥30 | 247 (63.7) | 202 (81.8) | 45 (18.22) | |
| Gender | ||||
| F | 247 (63.7) | 207 (83.8) | 40 (16.2) | 0.02∗∧ |
| M | 130 (34.5) | 96 (73.8) | 34 (26.2) | |
| Year of attendance | ||||
| 1st | 104 (27.6) | 80 (76.9) | 24 (23.1) | |
| 2nd | 101 (26.8) | 82 (81.2) | 19 (18.8) | 0.7∧ |
| 3rd | 88 (23.3) | 74 (84.1) | 14 (15.9) | |
| 4th | 84 (22.3) | 67 (79.8) | 17 (20.2) | |
| Macroarea | ||||
| North | 178 (45.9) | 142 (79.8) | 36 (20.2) | |
| Centre | 113 (29.1) | 95 (84.1) | 18 (15.9) | 0.1∧ |
| South | 97 (25) | 70 (72.2) | 27 (27.8) | |
|
| ||||
| Total | 388 (100) | 81 (20.9) | ||
*P < 0.05 (level of significance); ∧ P value concerns the difference between smokers and nonsmokers for each sociodemographic variable considered.
Health care providers' role in cessation (in smokers and nonsmokers sample).
| Opinions on health care providers' role in smoking cessation | Frequencies | Nonsmokers | Current smokers |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Should HPs get specific training on cessation techniques? | ||||
| Yes | 361 (94.3) | 291 (95.1) | 70 (90.9) | |
| No | 22 (5.7) | 15 (4.9) | 7 (9.1) | 0.002∗∧ |
| HPs serve as role models for their patients and the public? | ||||
| Yes | 309 (80.7) | 252 (82.4) | 57 (74.0) | |
| No | 74 (19.3) | 54 (17.6) | 20 (26.0) | <0.001∗∧ |
| Should HPs regularly advise smokers to quit? | ||||
| Yes | 377 (98.4) | 303 (99.0) | 74 (96.1) | |
| No | 6 (1.6) | 3 (1.0) | 3 (3.9) | 0.001∗°∧ |
| Should HPs regularly advise smokers to quit chewing tobacco/smoking cigar or pipe? | ||||
| Yes | 373 (97.4) | 299 (97.7) | 74 (96.1) | 0.003∗°∧ |
| No | 10 (2.6) | 7 (2.3) | 3 (3.9) | |
| Do HPs have a role in giving advice or information about smoking cessation to patients? | ||||
| Yes | 375 (97.9) | 299 (97.7) | 76 (98.7) | 0.004∗°∧ |
| No | 8 (2.1) | 7 (2.3) | 1 (1.3) | |
| Patients have more chances to quit smoking if helped by HPs? | ||||
| Yes | 332 (86.7) | 272 (88.9) | 60 (77.9) | <0.001∗∧ |
| No | 51 (13.3) | 34 (11.1) | 17 (22.1) | |
|
| ||||
| Postgraduate tobacco-related training | Frequencies | Nonsmokers | Current smokers |
|
|
| ||||
| Have you been taught about smoking risk during your postgraduate course? | ||||
| Yes | 262 (69.1) | 205 (67.4) | 57 (76.0) | 0.001∗∧ |
| No | 117 (30.9) | 99 (32.6) | 18 (24.0) | |
| Have you ever receive specific training on smoking cessation during your postgraduate course? | ||||
| Yes | 66 (17) | 53 (17.3) | 13 (16) | 0.003∗∧ |
| No | 313 (80.7) | 251 (81.8) | 62 (76.5) | |
| Have you ever heard, during your postgraduate course, about nicotin patches or gum used in cessation programs? | ||||
| Yes | 368 (94.8) | 294 (95.8) | 74 (91.4) | 0.002∗∧ |
| No | 11 (2.8) | 10 (3.3) | 1 (1.2) | |
| Have you ever heard, during your specialization, about antidepressant (Bupropion or Zyban) used in cessation programs? | ||||
| Yes | 163 (43.0) | 129 (42.4) | 4 (45.3) | 0.003∗∧ |
| No | 216 (57.0) | 175 (57.6) | 41 (54.6) | |
| Have you been taught about the importance of providing informative materials to help patients quit smoking? | ||||
| Yes | 195 (51.5) | 154 (50.6) | 41 (54.6) | 0.002∗∧ |
| No | 184 (48.5) | 150 (49.3) | 34 (45.3) | |
| Have you been taught about the importance of registering patients smoking history as part of the anamnesis? | ||||
| Yes | 222 (58.6) | 183 (60.2) | 39 (52.0) | 0.001∗∧ |
| No | 157 (41.4) | 121 (39.8) | 36 (48.0) | |
a5 missing values for “attitude and beliefs”; b1 missing value for “attitude and beliefs” among nonsmokers; c4 missing values for “attitude and beliefs” among current smokers; d9 missing values for variables concerning knowledge; e3 missing values for nonsmokers; f6 missing values among current smokers.
Chi-square test was performed to evaluate differences for categorical variables.
∧ P value is the difference between smokers and nonsmokers in each variable considered.
HPs: Health professionals; *P < 0.05 (level of significance); °Fisher's exact test.
Results of the binary logistic regression analysis for the outcome “being current smokers.” Dependent variable: “being current smokers.” Independent variable: age, gender, year of attendance, macroregion (south), macro-region (north), macroregion (centre), “should HPs get specific training on cessation techniques?”; “do HPs serve as role models for their patients and the public?”; “should HPs regularly advise smokers to quit chewing tobacco/smoking cigar or pipe?”; “do HPs have a role in giving advice or information about smoking cessation to patients?”.
| Variables | Crude OR (95% CI) | Adjusted OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Age | ||
| <30 (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| ≥30 | 0.65 (0.39–1.07) | 0.88 (0.51–1.56) |
| Gender | ||
| Female (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| Male | 1.83 (1.09–3.07) | 1.79 (1.06–3.03) |
| Year of attendance** | ||
| 1-2 years (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| 3-4 years | 1.05 (0.57–1.92) | 1.06 (0.56–1.2) |
| Macroregion | ||
| Centre (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| South | 1.67 (0.99–2.87) | 1.85 (1.05–3.24) |
| Macroregion | ||
| Centre (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| North | 0.93 (0.57–1.52) | 1.51 (0.77–2.95) |
| Should HPs get specific training on cessation techniques? | ||
| No (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 0.51 (0.20–1.31) | 0.64 (0.23–1.82) |
| Do HPs serve as role models for their patients and the public? | ||
| No (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 0.61 (0.34–1.1) | 0.58 (0.32–1.05) |
| Should HPs regularly advise smokers to quit chewing tobacco/smoking cigar or pipe? | ||
| No (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 0.57 (0.14–2.29) | 2.09 (0.2–22.77) |
| Do HPs have a role in giving advice or information about smoking cessation to patients? | ||
| No (reference)* | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 0.24 (0.48–1.23) | 0.31 (0.06–1.61) |
Hosmer and Lemeshow Test: P = 0.62.
*Reference group; **Hosmer-Lemeshow procedure (Hosmer and Lemeshow 1989) [15] (only covariates having a P value <0.25 at univariate analysis were introduced into the models).
All variables were transformed into binary ones.
Age: <30 versus ≥30 (because the possible answers were 25–29 or ≥30); gender: female versus male; year of attendance: 1-2 years versus 3-4 years; macroregion: centre versus south and centre versus north; and all the others (should HPs get specific training on cessation techniques?; do HPs serve as role models for their patients and the public?; should HPs regularly advise smokers to quit chewing tobacco/smoking cigar or pipe?; do HPs have a role in giving advice or information about smoking cessation to patients?) as no versus yes.