Site icon Healthy.net

Smoking Cessation: A Guide for Primary Care Clinicians

Smoking kills more than 400,000 persons a year in the United States. Every office visit is an opportunity to promote smoking cessation.

This Clinician’s Guide is based on the Clinical Practice Guideline on
Smoking Cessation, Number 18.
It was
prepared by a panel of experts convened by the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research,
and reflects a thorough review of evidence from clinical studies spanning 1978 to 1994.


Helping Smokers Quit

  1. Every person who smokes should be offered smoking cessation treatment at every office
    visit.
  2. Clinicians should ask about and record the tobacco-use status of every patient.
  3. Cessation treatment even as brief as 3 minutes a visit is effective.
  4. The more intense the treatment, the more effective it is in producing long-term abstinence
    from tobacco.
  5. Nicotine replacement therapy (nicotine patches or gum), social support, and skills
    training are effective components of smoking cessation treatment.
  6. Health care systems should be modified to routinely identify and intervene with all
    tobacco users at every visit.

Ask, Advise, Assist

Ask about smoking

Implement an officewide system that ensures that tobacco-use status is obtained and recorded for
every patient at every office visit.

Include tobacco use in vital signs data collected. Or place tobacco-use status stickers on all
patient charts or indicate smoking status using computer reminder systems.

Advise tobacco users to quit

Assist the patient with a quit plan

Advise the smoker to:

Give advice on successful quitting:

Encourage use of nicotine replacement therapy (for more information on prescribing,
precautions, and side effects, see the Clinical Practice Guideline):

Make culturally and educationally appropriate materials on cessation techniques readily
available in your office.

Intensive Programs

Offer intensive smoking cessation programs

If your patient prefers intensive treatment or you think such a program is appropriate, refer him
or her to an intensive smoking cessation program administered by a specialist. Always followup
with the patient about quitting.

If a smoker doesn’t want to quit, clinicians should ask questions at each visit that help the
patient identify (1) reasons to quit and (2) barriers to quitting. Pledge to assist the patient when
he or she is ready to quit.

Key Treatment Strategies

Three treatment strategies are particularly effective:

Nicotine replacement therapy—Should be encouraged for most patients. Although
the
patch and gum are both effective, the patch is associated with fewer compliance problems and
requires less effort to train patients in its use.

Clinician-provided social support—Should communicate caring and concern by
being
open to the patient’s fears and difficulties.

Skills training/problem-solving techniques—Should review previous quit successes
and
failures, anticipate relapse risk situations, and stress total abstinence starting on the quit day.

Followup

Schedule followup contact, either in person or by telephone

Timing:

Actions during followup visits:

All treatment strategies apply to adolescents who smoke. Clinicians should be
empathetic
and nonjudgmental and should personalize the encounter to the adolescent’s individual situation.
Nicotine replacement therapy may be considered in adolescents addicted to nicotine.

Prevent Relapse

To prevent relapse, offer ex-smokers reinforcement

Discuss specific problems, such as:

Fear of weight gain is an impediment to smoking cessation. Inform smokers that
many people gain weight when they stop smoking. Tell them that weight gain is a
minor risk compared with the risks of continued smoking. Tell patients to tackle one
problem at a time. First, be confident that they have quit smoking for good, then work
on reducing weight gain. Nicotine gum may delay weight gain.

For printed copies of this guide, the complete Clinical Practice Guideline, a
Quick Reference
Guide for Smoking Cessation
Specialists, a Consumer Version (available in
English and
Spanish), or a list of other AHCPR guidelines, call 800-358-9295 or write:

AHCPR Publications Clearinghouse
P.O. Box 8547
Silver Spring, MD 20907

These and other guidelines are available through the Internet (http://www.ahcpr.gov/guide/).
Copies of this and other brochures are free through InstantFAX, which operates all day every
day. Using a fax machine equipped with a touchtone telephone, dial (301) 594-2800, push 1, and
then press the start button for instructions and a list of publications.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Public Health Service
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research
2101 East Jefferson Street, Suite 501
Rockville, MD 20852

AHCPR Publication No. 96-0693
April 1996


Guidelines and Medical Outcomes
AHCPR Home Page
Department of Health and Human Services Home
Page

Exit mobile version