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Primary care-based smoking interventions.

J K Ockene1

  • 1Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester 01655, USA. jockene@banyan.ummed.edu

Nicotine & Tobacco Research : Official Journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco
|January 5, 2002
PubMed
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Primary care physicians can significantly boost smoking cessation rates with brief interventions. However, real-world delivery is low, necessitating research into effective implementation strategies and provider incentives.

Area of Science:

  • Public Health
  • Clinical Medicine
  • Behavioral Science

Background:

  • Primary care settings are crucial for promoting smoking cessation.
  • Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) demonstrate that smoking interventions in primary care significantly increase cessation rates, with higher intervention doses yielding greater effects.
  • Despite evidence and positive physician attitudes, the real-world delivery of smoking cessation interventions by physicians remains low, posing a public health concern.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate methods for increasing the delivery rate and effectiveness of provider-delivered brief smoking interventions in primary care.
  • To identify optimal strategies, incentives, and system-level changes to enhance physician engagement in smoking cessation.
  • To explore the application of stepped-care and patient-treatment matching models for smoking cessation.

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Main Methods:

  • Review of interventions to increase implementation, including provider education, clinical systems/procedures (e.g., screening, tracking), and organizational policies (e.g., reimbursement).
  • Identification of research questions focusing on physician incentives, provider reminder strategies, implementation in diverse settings, and stepped-care models.
  • Recognition of the need for quasi-experimental designs and qualitative strategies due to the nature of factors like reimbursement policies.

Main Results:

  • Evidence supports that smoking interventions in primary care significantly increase cessation rates.
  • The dose of intervention correlates positively with increased smoking cessation effects.
  • Current delivery rates of smoking cessation interventions in primary care are suboptimal.

Conclusions:

  • Enhancing the delivery of primary care-based smoking cessation interventions is essential for public health.
  • Further research is needed to determine the most effective incentives and strategies for physicians to implement these interventions.
  • Quasi-experimental and qualitative research designs are necessary to study factors influencing intervention delivery, such as reimbursement policies.