1. Implementation of the Tobacco Tactics intervention versus usual care in Trinity Health community hospitals
- Author
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Christine M. Olree, Patricia L. Thomas, Andrea H. Waltje, Kimberly A. Maguire, David L. Ronis, Lisa Friedman, Sonia A. Duffy, Sue Klotz, Neil Jordan, Lee A. Ewing, and Stephanie V. Hall
- Subjects
Counseling ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Psychological intervention ,Hospitals, Community ,Smoking Prevention ,Health administration ,0302 clinical medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medicine(all) ,lcsh:R5-920 ,education.field_of_study ,Practice Patterns, Nurses' ,Health Policy ,Smoking ,Health services research ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Telemedicine ,3. Good health ,Female ,Inpatient ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,0305 other medical science ,Cessation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Population ,Health Informatics ,Health Promotion ,Cigarette Smoking ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nursing ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Health policy ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Research ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Family medicine ,Smoking cessation ,Nursing Care ,Smoking Cessation ,Patient Participation ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Background Guided by the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) implementation framework, a National Institutes of Health-sponsored study compared the nurse-administered Tobacco Tactics intervention to usual care. A prior paper describes the effectiveness of the Tobacco Tactics intervention. This subsequent paper provides data describing the remaining constructs of the RE-AIM framework. Methods This pragmatic study used a mixed methods, quasi-experimental design in five Michigan community hospitals of which three received the nurse-administered Tobacco Tactics intervention and two received usual care. Nurses and patients were surveyed pre- and post-intervention. Measures included reach (patient participation rates, characteristics, and receipt of services), adoption (nurse participation rates and characteristics), implementation (pre-to post-training changes in nurses' attitudes, delivery of services, barriers to implementation, opinions about training, documentation of services, and numbers of volunteer follow-up phone calls), and maintenance (continuation of the intervention once the study ended). Results Reach: Patient participation rates were 71.5 %. Compared to no change in the control sites, there were significant pre- to post-intervention increases in self-reported receipt of print materials in the intervention hospitals (n = 1370, p
- Published
- 2016
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