Referring Hospitalized Smokers to Outpatient Quit Services A Randomized Trial

被引:11
|
作者
Fellows, Jeffrey L. [1 ]
Mularski, Richard A. [1 ]
Leo, Michael C. [1 ]
Bentz, Charles J. [2 ]
Waiwaiole, Lisa A. [1 ]
Francisco, Melanie C. [1 ]
Funkhouser, Kimberly [1 ]
Stoney, Catherine M. [3 ]
机构
[1] Kaiser Permanente Ctr Hlth Res, Portland, OR USA
[2] Legacy Hlth Syst, Tobacco Cessat & Prevent, Portland, OR USA
[3] NHLBI, Div Cardiovasc Sci, NIH, Bldg 10, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
关键词
SMOKING-CESSATION INTERVENTION; SYSTEM; CARE;
D O I
10.1016/j.amepre.2016.06.014
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Introduction: Linking outpatient cessation services to bedside counseling for hospitalized smokers can improve long-run quit rates. Adding an assisted referral (AR) offer to a tobacco treatment specialist consult service fits the team approach to care in U.S. hospitals. Design: A two-arm patient-randomized trial tested the effectiveness of adding an AR offer to outpatient smoking-cessation services and interactive voice recognition (AR+IVR) follow-up to a usual care (UC) tobacco-cessation consult for hospitalized smokers. Setting/participants: Over 24 months (November 2011-November 2013), 898 hospitalized adult smokers interested in quitting smoking were recruited from three large hospitals in the Portland, Oregon, area: an integrated group model HMO (n=622), a community hospital (n=195), and an academic health center (n=81). Intervention: Tobacco treatment specialists identified smokers and provided an intensive bedside tobacco use assessment and cessation consultation (UC). AR+IVR recipients also received proactive ARs to available outpatient counseling programs and medications, and linked patients to a tailored IVR telephone follow-up system. Main outcome measures: The primary outcome was self-reported 30-day abstinence at 6-month follow-up. Secondary outcomes included self-reported and continuous abstinence and biochemically confirmed 7-day abstinence at 6 months. Follow-up was completed in September 2014; data were analyzed in 2015. Results: A total of 597 and 301 hospitalized smokers were randomized to AR+IVR and UC, respectively. AR+IVR and UC recipients received 19.3 and 17.0 minutes of bedside counseling (p=0.372), respectively. Most (58%) AR+IVR patients accepted referrals for counseling, 43% accepted medications, and 28% accepted both. Self-reported 30-day abstinence for AR+IVR (17.9%) and UC (17.3%) were not statistically significant (p=0.569). Differences in 7-day, continuous, and biochemically confirmed abstinence by treatment group also were insignificant, overall and adjusting for site. Conclusions: Adding an AR to outpatient counseling and medications did not increase cigarette abstinence at 6 months compared to UC alone. (C) 2016 American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:609 / 619
页数:11
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