Literature DB >> 9191631

Smoking cessation interventions in rural family practices: an UPRNet study.

J W Sesney1, N E Kreher, J M Hickner, S Webb.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Primary care physicians are urged to offer smoking cessation counseling to their patients. Many studies have sought to determine which smoking interventions are most effective in medical office settings. As a result, routine identification of smokers, brief counseling, referral to smoking cessation programs, and nicotine replacement therapy are advocated. The context of patient visits during which smoking cessation advice is given, however, has received little attention. The objective of this study was to determine if patients' reasons for visits and self-reported readiness to quit smoking are associated with likelihood and type of smoking cessation intervention offered by family physicians.
METHODS: The study was conducted in the Upper Peninsula Research Network (UPRNet), a voluntary association of family physicians in 15 medical clinics located in rural areas of northern Michigan. Practice coordinators administered a 1-page exit questionnaire to every other adult patient seen by a participating physician immediately after the office visit. Clinicians were blinded to the specific purpose of the questionnaire. During the study, 2317 questionnaires were administered, yielding information on 455 smokers.
RESULTS: The overall rate of physicians' providing any smoking cessation intervention at any type of visit was 47%. There was a significant association between frequency of smoking cessation intervention and reasons for visits (chi 2 = 10.46, P = .01). There was a statistically significant difference between stages of readiness to quit and frequency of smoking cessation intervention offered (chi 2 = 26.5, P < .001). Clinicians offered smoking cessation interventions to smokers in the precontemplative stage significantly less often than to smokers in the contemplation, preparation, or action stages.
CONCLUSIONS: UPRNet practitioners vary the frequency of smoking cessation interventions according to patients' reasons for the medical visit and their readiness to quit smoking.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9191631

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Fam Pract        ISSN: 0094-3509            Impact factor:   0.493


  5 in total

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Authors:  David A Katz; Fengming Tang; Babalola Faseru; Phillip A Horwitz; Philip Jones; John Spertus
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2.  Is making smoking status a vital sign sufficient to increase cessation support actions in clinical practice?

Authors:  Raymond Boyle; Leif I Solberg
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2004 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 5.166

3.  Effect on cessation counseling of documenting smoking status as a routine vital sign: an ACORN study.

Authors:  Stephen F Rothemich; Steven H Woolf; Robert E Johnson; Amy E Burgett; Sharon K Flores; David W Marsland; Jasjit S Ahluwalia
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2008 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 5.166

4.  Qualitative study of patients' perceptions of doctors' advice to quit smoking: implications for opportunistic health promotion.

Authors:  C C Butler; R Pill; N C Stott
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1998-06-20

5.  Smoking cessation support in Iran: availability, sources & predictors.

Authors:  Nafiseh Toghianifar; Nizal Sarrafzadegan; Hamidreza Roohafza; Masoumeh Sadeghi; Babak Eshrati; Gholamhossein Sadri
Journal:  Indian J Med Res       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 2.375

  5 in total

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