Literature DB >> 31593497

Feasibility, Acceptability, and Adoption of an Inpatient Tobacco Treatment Service at a Safety-Net Hospital: A Mixed-Methods Study.

Bhavna Seth1, Nicole Herbst1, Katia Oleinik2, Kristopher Clark1, Eric D Helm3, Charles O'Donnell3, Carmel Fitzgerald3, Carolina Wong3, Renda Soylemez Wiener3,4, Hasmeena Kathuria3.   

Abstract

Rationale: Hospitalization is an opportunity to engage smokers who may not seek tobacco treatment. Our safety-net hospital developed and implemented an inpatient intervention consisting of an "opt-out" electronic health record-based Best Practice Alert (BPA)+order-set, designed to trigger referral to the Tobacco Treatment Consult (TTC) service (a team staffed by tobacco treatment specialists) for all hospitalized smokers, regardless of motivation to quit.
Objectives: We performed a sequential explanatory mixed-methods study to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and adoption of the TTC service.
Methods: Among all admissions of adult "current smokers" between July 2016 and June 2017, we calculated the percentage of patients whose clinicians accepted the order-set (through a simple "order" click), thus generating the TTC referral. We then determined the extent of clinician follow-through of TTC recommendations for prescribing nicotine replacement therapy among 1,651 consecutive smokers seen by the TTC service. Finally, we conducted qualitative interviews with inpatient clinicians (n = 25) to understand their rationale for adoption or nonuse of the TTC intervention, including perceived usefulness, barriers to adoption, and strategies to improve the utility of the service.
Results: Clinicians accepted the TTC order-set for 4,100 out of 6,598 "current smokers" (62.1%) for whom the BPA fired, typically after initially deferring the BPA. Rates of acceptance significantly differed across clinical services (range: 8% [obstetrics-gynecology] to 82.2% [cardiology]; P < 0.00001). A chart review showed that 43.5% (719/1,651) of the patients seen by the TTC service desired outpatient nicotine replacement therapy, but only half of these patients (48.8%; 351/719) received a discharge prescription from the inpatient team. Clinicians expressed that they valued the TTC service, but that BPA fatigue, time constraints, competing priorities, and poor communication with the TTC service were barriers to using the service and following recommendations. Clinicians suggested strategies to address barriers to the use of tobacco treatment interventions during hospitalization and after discharge.Conclusions: Implementing a large-scale "opt-out" tobacco treatment service for hospitalized smokers at a safety-net hospital is feasible and acceptable, but suffers from inconsistent adoption due to a variety of clinician barriers. System-level changes are needed to increase uptake and sustain inpatient tobacco treatment interventions to promote smoking cessation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  electronic health record; hospitalized smokers; inpatient tobacco treatment; smoking cessation

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 31593497     DOI: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201906-424OC

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Am Thorac Soc        ISSN: 2325-6621


  1 in total

1.  Patient navigation among recently hospitalized smokers to promote tobacco treatment: Results from a randomized exploratory pilot study.

Authors:  Lisa M Quintiliani; Hasmeena Kathuria; Ve Truong; Jennifer Murillo; Belinda Borrelli; Ziming Xuan; Karen E Lasser
Journal:  Addict Behav       Date:  2020-09-15       Impact factor: 3.913

  1 in total

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