| Literature DB >> 31625868 |
Harlan R Juster1, Christina A Ortega-Peluso1, Elizabeth M Brown2, Kim A Hayes2, Karla Sneegas3, Gizelle Gopez3, S Rene Lavinghouze3,4.
Abstract
Although most smokers visit a health care provider annually, only half report being provided evidence-based assistance with quitting, defined as brief counseling and an offer of medication. The New York State Department of Health designed a provider-targeted media campaign to increase provider-assisted quitting, which was implemented in 2016. Messaging focused on the addictive nature of tobacco products and evidence-based interventions. Online surveys of 400 New York State health care providers measured advertising awareness, associations between awareness and assistance with quit attempts, and perceptions that patients expect providers to assist with quitting. Forty-three percent of providers were aware of at least 1 advertisement, and providers who had seen an advertisement were more likely to provide evidence-based assistance (AOR = 2.55, P = .01), which includes recommending or prescribing cessation medications. Provider-targeted media is a promising approach to reach health care providers and encourage evidence-based smoking cessation treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31625868 PMCID: PMC6824143 DOI: 10.5888/pcd16.180613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
FigureThree advertisements used in New York State Department of Health promotion of tobacco cessation patient interventions among health care providers. The 3 photographs provide links to a website: https://talktoyourpatients.health.ny.gov/.
Provider (N = 400) Awareness of Provider-Targeted Media Campaign to Increase Patient Assistance With Tobacco Cessation, New York State Department of Health, 2016
| Outcome | Aware of Campaign, % (95% CI) (n = 172) | Unaware of Campaign, % (95% CI) (n = 228) |
| AOR (95% CI) [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strongly agree that patients expect providers to discuss tobacco use and quitting | 25.4 (17.9–34.6) | 14.1 (9.1–21.2) | .03 | 1.86 (0.95–3.65) [.07] |
| Ask patients about tobacco use | 95.1 (88.4–98.0) | 90.6 (84.0–94.6) | .19 | 1.81 (0.55–5.96) [.33] |
| Ask new patients about tobacco use | 93.8 (86.6–97.2) | 89.4 (82.6–93.7) | .24 | 1.80 (0.63–5.10) [.27] |
| Ask returning patients about tobacco use | 80.1 (70.8–87.0) | 73.1 (64.7–80.1) | .22 | 1.34 (0.67–2.68) [.41] |
| Advise patients to quit | 92.1 (84.7–96.1) | 84.4 (76.7–89.8) | .07 | 1.87 (0.74–4.72) [.19] |
| Assist patients with quitting | 83.2 (74.2–89.5) | 65.6 (55.8–72.6) | .001 | 2.55 (1.29–5.07) [.01] |
| Suggest setting a quit date | 50.6 (41.0–60.1) | 38.7 (30.7–47.3) | .07 | 1.45 (0.84–1.51) [.18] |
| Suggest a cessation class or program | 63.3 (53.3–72.2) | 45.6 (37.3–54.2) | .01 | 2.01 (1.15–3.53) [.02] |
| Suggest calling a quitline | 43.5 (34.3–53.1) | 16.9 (11.8–23.8) | <.001 | 3.84 (2.08–7.09) [<.001] |
| Provide self-help materials | 37.1 (28.4–46.7) | 16.4 (11.1–23.4) | <.01 | 2.80 (1.51–5.17) [<.001] |
| Prescribe or recommend nicotine replacement therapy or stop-smoking medications | 55.3 (45.6–64.7) | 41.5 (33.5–50.1) | .03 | 1.59 (0.92–2.75) [.10] |
Abbreviations: AOR, adjusted odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Providers aware of campaign versus providers not aware, estimated using logistic regression controlling for age, race/ethnicity, provider type, sex, and training. Reference group for all logistic regressions was providers not aware of the campaign.