Tobacco use is the single greatest cause of disease and premature death in America today. To address this major public health concern, states are required to provide smoking cessation services. The purpose of this article is to examine the effectiveness of a one-time telephone adult smoking cessation program designed by a certified addictions registered nurse-advanced practice and conducted over an 11-month period by the State of Nevada. Specifically, the program included a telephone-based counseling session and distribution of a 2-week supply of nicotine replacement therapy patches. The sample population consisted of 1471 Nevada residents, men and women, aged 18 years and over who called the Quitline for smoking cessation help. All participants in the program provided consent for a follow-up call to report on their quit rates and satisfaction with the intervention at 7 months postintervention. Although everyone who participated in the interventions was called, only 373 (25.4%) were actually reached via telephone contact. Of this group, quit rates showed that 34.6% reported continuous abstinence at 7 months, whereas 35.1% were abstinent at the 7-day point prevalence and 31.9% were abstinent at the 30-day point prevalence. Patient satisfaction with the program revealed that 87.6% (n = 373) of the participants reported being very or mostly satisfied. This program evaluation study shows that short-duration telephone counseling plus nicotine replacement therapy was associated with helping at least one third of the participants to quit using tobacco for all of the prevalence points-7 and 30 days and at 7 months postintervention.
Tobacco use remains the single most preventable cause of death and disability worldwide. In the Philippines, 28.3% of the people are current tobacco smokers, which is one of the highest smoking rates in Asia. The World Health Organization estimates that 10 Filipinos die every day from cancer, stroke, and lung and heart disease caused by cigarette smoke and approximately 24 million Filipinos are exposed to secondhand smoke in the home. Although there are quit lines in all 50 U.S. states and territories, there was no access to this smoking cessation program in the Philippines before the initiation of the international collaboration described in this article. In 2012, a Filipino-American nurse with extensive quit line expertise initiated collaboration between the United States and Philippine smoking cessation experts to plan the creation of a quit line at the Lung Center of the Philippines. The Conceptual Model for Partnership and Sustainability in Global Health was used as a foundation for the planning, implementation, and evaluation of the Philippine Quit Line project, which was funded in 2017 by the World Health Organization and the Philippine Department of Health. This funding and other outcomes related to nursing education about tobacco addictions in the Philippines suggest that the Partnership and Sustainability in Global Health Model can provide a blueprint for international collaboration on health projects that are rooted in real collaborative and sustainable partnerships.
The United States Preventive Task Force recommends tobacco cessation as a preventive service with a high certainty of substantial benefit. Brief intervention training for healthcare providers in treating tobacco use and dependence has been well established in the literature. Undergraduate nursing students' may be at an optimal time in their career to undergo training on appropriate tobacco cessation teaching methods. The purpose of this project was to assess the outcomes of tobacco brief intervention training for undergraduate nursing students. Outcomes include knowledge of tobacco use health and economic impact and use of brief intervention for tobacco use by undergraduate students. This study demonstrates that brief intervention training may reasonably be administered during traditional nursing school curriculum. Further studies are warranted to evaluate if this training has any impact on quality of patient instruction during patient interactions.
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