What to do with a patient who smokes

被引:217
|
作者
Schroeder, SA
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Smoking Cessat Leadership Ctr, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Med, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
来源
关键词
D O I
10.1001/jama.294.4.482
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Despite the reality that smoking remains the most important preventable cause of death and disability, most clinicians underperform in helping smokers quit. Of the 46 million current smokers in the United States, 70% say they would like to quit, but only a small fraction are able to do so on their own because nicotine is so highly addictive. One third to one half of all smokers die prematurely. Reasons clinicians avoid helping smokers quit include time constraints, lack of expertise, lack of financial incentives, respect for a smoker's privacy, fear that a negative message might lose customers, pessimism because most smokers are unable to quit, stigma, and clinicians being smokers. The gold standard for cessation treatment is the 5 As (ask, advise, assess, assist, and arrange). Yet, only a minority of physicians know about these, and fewer put them to use. Acceptable shortcuts are asking, advising, and referring to a telephone "quit line" or an internal referral system. Successful treatment combines counseling with pharmacotherapy (nicotine replacement therapy with or without psychotropic medication such as bupropion). Nicotine replacement therapy comes in long-acting (patch) or short-acting (gum, lozenge, nasal spray, or inhaler) forms. Ways to counter clinicians' pessimism about cessation include the knowledge that most smokers require multiple quit attempts before they succeed, that rigorous studies show long-term quit rates of 14% to 20%, with 1 report as high as 35%, that cessation rates for users of telephone quit lines and integrated health care systems are comparable with those of individual clinicians, and that no other clinical intervention can offer such a large potential benefit.
引用
收藏
页码:482 / 487
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Who still smokes in older age?
    Cho, Sung-il
    Kim, Youngmee
    TOBACCO INDUCED DISEASES, 2019, 17 : 21 - 21
  • [32] Who Are They? What Do They Do? How Do I Get There?
    Pantages, Dick
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 2008, 71 (04) : 4 - +
  • [33] The Nursing Informatics Workforce: Who Are They and What Do They Do?
    Murphy, Judy
    NURSING ECONOMICS, 2011, 29 (03): : 150 - 152
  • [34] The practice of acupuncture: Who are the providers and what do they do?
    Sherman, KJ
    Cherkin, DC
    Eisenberg, DM
    Erro, J
    Hrbek, A
    Deyo, RA
    ANNALS OF FAMILY MEDICINE, 2005, 3 (02) : 151 - 158
  • [35] Who are plant breeders, what do they do, and why?
    Coors, James G.
    PLANT BREEDING: ARNEL R HALLAUER INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM, 2006, : 51 - 60
  • [36] Adult stem cells: who are they, what do they do ?
    Coulombel, L
    BULLETIN DE L ACADEMIE NATIONALE DE MEDECINE, 2005, 189 (04): : 589 - 602
  • [37] MEDICINE CLERKSHIP DIRECTORS - WHO ARE THEY AND WHAT DO THEY DO
    MAGARIAN, GJ
    MAZUR, DJ
    HICKAM, DH
    CLINICAL RESEARCH, 1989, 37 (02): : A811 - A811
  • [38] Physicians in methadone clinics: Who are they and what do they do?
    Wechsberg, WM
    Crum, L
    Roussel, AE
    Suerken, C
    Diesenhaus, H
    JOURNAL OF ADDICTIVE DISEASES, 2001, 20 (02) : 183 - 183
  • [39] Who can do something, do what they can
    Chambers, Eddie
    ART JOURNAL, 2023, 82 (01) : 5 - 7
  • [40] Canadian women in timber ... who are they? What do they do?
    不详
    FORESTRY CHRONICLE, 1996, 72 (06): : 573 - 573