Unbound MEDLINE

Training physicians in counseling about smoking cessation. A randomized trial of the "Quit for Life" program. Annals of internal medicine. [Ann Intern Med] Journal article

 
TitleTraining physicians in counseling about smoking cessation. A randomized trial of the "Quit for Life" program.
Author(s)Cummings SR, Coates TJ, Richard RJ, Hansen B, Zahnd EG, VanderMartin R, Duncan C, Gerbert B, Martin A, Stein MJ 
InstitutionUniversity of California, San Francisco.
SourceAnn Intern Med 1989 Apr 15; 110(8):640-7.
MeSHAttitude of Health Personnel
Counseling
Education, Medical, Continuing
Health Maintenance Organizations
Humans
Internal Medicine
Motivation
Patient Education
Physician's Role
Questionnaires
Random Allocation
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
San Francisco
Smoking
AbstractSTUDY OBJECTIVE: To test whether physicians who receive a continuing education program ("Quit for Life") about how to counsel smokers to quit would counsel smokers more effectively and have higher rates of long-term smoking cessation among their patients who smoke.
DESIGN: Randomized trial with blinded assessment of principal outcomes.
SETTING: Four health maintenance organization medical centers in northern California.
SUBJECTS: Eighty-one internists assigned by blinded randomization to receive training (40) or serve as controls (41). Consecutive samples of smokers visiting each physician (mean, 25.6 patients per experimental and 25.2 per control physician).
INTERVENTIONS: Internists received 3 hours of training about how to help smokers quit. Physicians and their office staff also were given self-help booklets to distribute free to smokers and were urged to use a system of stickers on charts to remind physicians to counsel smokers about quitting.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: On the basis of telephone interviews with patients after visiting the physician, we determined that internists who attended the Quit for Life program discussed smoking with more patients who smoked, spent more time counseling them about smoking, helped more patients set dates to quit smoking, gave out more self-help booklets, and made more follow-up appointments to discuss smoking than did internists in the control group. One year later, the rate of biochemically confirmed, long-term (greater than or equal to 9 months) abstinence from smoking was 1% higher among all patients of trained internists than among patients of controls (95% CI, -0.1% to +2.3%), and 2.2% (+0.2% to +4.3%) higher among the patients who most wanted to quit smoking.
CONCLUSIONS: This continuing education program substantially changed the way physicians counseled smokers. As a result, a few more patients who wanted to quit smoking achieved long-term abstinence.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Clinical Trial
Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial
PubMed ID2930094
  
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