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Related Concept Videos

Nursing Interventions I: Taxonomy of Nursing Interventions01:03

Nursing Interventions I: Taxonomy of Nursing Interventions

Nursing interventions are chosen as part of the planning process to achieve patient outcomes. Once nursing diagnoses are determined, the goals and outcomes are specified, then the nursing interventions are selected and individualized according to the patient's situation.
A nursing intervention is a treatment or action based on scientific concepts and knowledge from the nursing, behavioral, and physical sciences. Identifying and prioritizing nursing interventions based on the desired outcome is...
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Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease-V: Management

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Nursing Interventions II: Selecting and Classifying the Nursing Interventions01:29

Nursing Interventions II: Selecting and Classifying the Nursing Interventions

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Operant Conditioning Intervention01:24

Operant Conditioning Intervention

Operant conditioning serves as a foundational principle in therapeutic interventions aimed at modifying maladaptive behaviors. Central to this approach is the notion that behaviors, both adaptive and maladaptive, are learned through reinforcement. By analyzing the environmental factors that reinforce problematic behaviors, clinicians can design interventions to weaken these reinforcements and replace maladaptive behaviors with healthier alternatives.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 15, 2026

Electroencephalographic, Heart Rate, and Galvanic Skin Response Assessment for an Advertising Perception Study: Application to Antismoking Public Service Announcements
06:39

Electroencephalographic, Heart Rate, and Galvanic Skin Response Assessment for an Advertising Perception Study: Application to Antismoking Public Service Announcements

Published on: August 28, 2017

Interventions for tobacco smoking.

Tanya R Schlam1, Timothy B Baker

  • 1Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin 53711, USA. trschlam@ctri.medicine.wisc.edu

Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
|January 10, 2013
PubMed
Summary

Smoking cessation treatments improve quit rates, but effective interventions are needed for all phases of quitting, including relapse recovery. A chronic care model is essential for comprehensive smoking cessation support.

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Electroencephalographic, Heart Rate, and Galvanic Skin Response Assessment for an Advertising Perception Study: Application to Antismoking Public Service Announcements
06:39

Electroencephalographic, Heart Rate, and Galvanic Skin Response Assessment for an Advertising Perception Study: Application to Antismoking Public Service Announcements

Published on: August 28, 2017

Methods to Evaluate Cytotoxicity and Immunosuppression of Combustible Tobacco Product Preparations
09:25

Methods to Evaluate Cytotoxicity and Immunosuppression of Combustible Tobacco Product Preparations

Published on: January 10, 2015

Area of Science:

  • Public Health
  • Behavioral Science
  • Addiction Medicine

Background:

  • Smoking remains a leading preventable cause of death in the US, with approximately 19% of adults currently smoking.
  • Without intervention, long-term smoking abstinence rates are low (~5%), but evidence-based cessation treatments can increase success rates to 10-30%.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review the effectiveness of smoking cessation interventions across different phases of the quitting process.
  • To identify gaps in current treatments, particularly for the relapse recovery phase.
  • To advocate for a chronic care approach to smoking cessation.

Main Methods:

  • Systematic review of smoking cessation interventions.
  • Evaluation of treatments targeting distinct phases: motivation, cessation, maintenance, and relapse recovery.
  • Analysis of intervention effectiveness and potential for complementary effects.

Main Results:

  • Effective treatments exist for the cessation phase, but interventions for the relapse recovery phase are less developed.
  • The review highlights the need for interventions that work within and across different quitting phases.
  • Current effective treatments increase abstinence rates significantly compared to unaided attempts.

Conclusions:

  • A comprehensive chronic care model for smoking cessation requires effective interventions for all phases, including relapse recovery.
  • Developing interventions with complementary effects across phases is crucial for sustained abstinence.
  • Broadly disseminable and cost-effective treatments are needed to address the public health burden of smoking.