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Implementation of a systematic tobacco treatment protocol in a surgical outpatient setting: a feasibility study.

Authors :
Sadek J
Moloo H
Belanger P
Nadeau K
Aitken D
Foss K
Zwiep T
McIsaac D
Williams L
Raiche I
Musselman R
Mullen KA
Source :
Canadian journal of surgery. Journal canadien de chirurgie [Can J Surg] 2021 Feb 03; Vol. 64 (1), pp. E51-E58. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Feb 03.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Smoking cessation programs started as late as 4 weeks before surgery reduce perioperative morbidity and death, yet outpatient clinic interventions are rarely provided. Our aim was to evaluate the feasibility of implementing a tobacco treatment protocol designed for an outpatient surgical setting.<br />Methods: We completed a pre-post feasibility study of the implementation of a systematic, evidence-based tobacco treatment protocol in an outpatient colorectal surgery clinic. Outcomes included smoking prevalence, pre- and postimplementation smoker identification and intervention rates, recruitment, retention, smoking cessation and provider satisfaction.<br />Results: Preimplementation, 15.5% of 116 surveyed patients were smokers. Fewer than 10% of surveyed patients reported being asked about smoking, and none were offered any cessation intervention. Over a 16-month postimplementation period, 1198 patients were seen on 2103 visits. Of these, 950 (79.3%) patients were asked smoking status on first visit and 1030 (86.0%) were asked on at least 1 visit. Of 169 identified smokers, 99 (58.6%) were referred to follow-up support using an opt-out approach. At 1-, 3- and 6-month follow-up, intention-to-quit rates among 78 enrolled patients were 24.4%, 22.9% and 19.2%, respectively. Postimplementation staff surveys reported that the protocol was easy to use, that staff would use it again and that it had positive patient responses.<br />Conclusion: Implementation of our smoking cessation protocol in an outpatient surgical clinic was found to be feasible and used minimal clinic resources. This protocol could lead to increases in identification and documentation of smoking status, delivery of smoking cessation interventions and rates of smoking reduction and cessation.<br />Competing Interests: None declared.<br /> (© 2021 Joule Inc. or its licensors.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1488-2310
Volume :
64
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Canadian journal of surgery. Journal canadien de chirurgie
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33533579
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1503/cjs.009919