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How best to motivate and help smokers to stop

How best to motivate and help smokers to stop. Robert West. University College London November 2010. Topics. Recent trends in smoking prevalence and cessation rates in England Effectiveness of clinical interventions to help smokers to stop Use of clinical interventions by English smokers

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How best to motivate and help smokers to stop

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  1. How best to motivate and help smokers to stop Robert West University College London November 2010

  2. Topics • Recent trends in smoking prevalence and cessation rates in England • Effectiveness of clinical interventions to help smokers to stop • Use of clinical interventions by English smokers • What makes a good stop smoking practitioner • NHS Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training

  3. Smoking prevalence was declining prior to ‘smoking ban’ www.smokinginengland.info

  4. The rate of decline increased after the ‘ban’ www.smokinginengland.info

  5. But there has been little further reduction since the recession began www.smokinginengland.info

  6. The picture is similar in higher social grades … A-C1: professional to clerical C2-E: skilled manual to long-term unemployed www.smokinginengland.info

  7. … and lower social grades www.smokinginengland.info

  8. Attempts to stop smoking have declined since 2007 … Data from Smoking Toolkit Study; p<0.0001 for decline; N=19,503

  9. … as has the percentage of smokers who report having stopped in the past 12 months Data from Smoking Toolkit Study; p<0.0001 for decline; N=19,503

  10. Clinical interventions are effective at improving success rates Compared with placebo when added to group or individual support Compared with brief advice or written materials Data from Cochrane reviews; statistically significant effects with combined sample size >1000 and no significant heterogeneity

  11. Some treatments are better than others Data from Cochrane reviews; statistically significant effects with combined sample size >1000 and no significant heterogeneity

  12. Highest success rates lie with using the NHS Stop Smoking Services Significantly better than no aid adjusting for confounding variables, p<0.001 Data from www.smokinginengland.info; based on smokers who tried to stop in the past year who report still not smoking at the survey adjusting for other predictors of success (age, dependence, time since quit attempt, social grade, recent prior quit attempts, abrupt vs gradual cessation): N=7,939

  13. Very few smokers use the most effective methods Percentage of quit attempts using different methods; data from Smoking Toolkit Study: N=7,808

  14. GPs are not helping as much as they could Percentage of smokers and recent ex-smokers for whom …; data from Smoking Toolkit Study, N=4,090

  15. GP offer of support is associated with higher rates of attempt to stop

  16. GP recommendations are strongly associated with method of quitting by smokers

  17. Performance of the NHS Stop Smoking Services varies considerably Negative impact means less than 25% CO-verified success rate Impact=Number of 4-week, CO-verified quitters generated above what would have been expected from medication alone (25% success rate) per 100,000 adult population: Data from Information Centre

  18. What makes a good stop smoking practitioner?

  19. Establish rapport and gain confidence of the smoker Ensure that the smoker has a clear understanding of the behavioural support plan and his/her role and obligations Gain strong commitment to engagement with the plan and the goal of total abstinence Assess and record smoking and quitting history Discuss medication options and make plans to get appropriate medication Record decisions taken and reasons Measure and record CO and explain significance of the reading Elicit and answer questions and address concerns Make and record appointment for quit date session Discuss the precise quit point and use of medication and smoking prior to that point Advise on preparations for the quit date Close consultation by ‘looking forward’ to seeing smoker on the quit date Session 1: Prequit

  20. Re-establish rapport and confidence in you and the plan Confirm the smoker’s understanding of the plan and his/her obligations Have the client confirm commitment to the plan and the total abstinence goal Discuss with client beginning to think like an ‘ex-smoker’ Review and record medication use to date and any side-effects Discuss appropriate ways of addressing side effects or failure to use medication as required Measure and record CO and explain how this will decline following abstinence Elicit and answer questions and address concerns Make and record next appointment and offer additional support Discuss with client what to expect over the following week in terms of craving and withdrawal symptoms Discuss specific actions that the smoker will take when faced with cravings and threats to abstinence Close consultation by ‘looking forward’ to seeing client having not smoked Session 2: Quit day

  21. Re-establish rapport Assess and record self-reported smoking status Measure and record CO and discuss the findings in a way that is motivational Reward abstinence Review and record positive and negative experiences, self-efficacy and cravings since the quit date Review and record medication use and side-effects If any smoking has occurred, discuss the circumstances and if appropriate gain renewed commitment to total abstinence Discuss specific ways of dealing with negative experiences and medication side-effects Record any proposed changes to medication Elicit and answer questions and address concerns Make and record appointment for the following week and renew offer of additional support that is available Close consultation by ‘looking forward’ to seeing smoker next time Sessions 3-5: Post-quit

  22. Re-establish rapport Assess and record self-reported smoking status Measure and record CO and discuss the findings in a way that is motivational Reward abstinence Review and record positive and negative experiences, self-efficacy and cravings since the quit date Review and record medication use and side-effects If any smoking has occurred, discuss the circumstances and if appropriate gain renewed commitment to total abstinence Discuss specific ways of dealing with negative experiences and medication side-effects Record any proposed changes to medication Elicit and answer questions and address concerns Close consultation by wishing the smoker well, advising of the possibility of follow-up and offering additional support as required Session 6: Closing session

  23. 11. Record keeping • 3 types of information for every client • characteristics of smoker • treatment provided • outcome • Needs to be: • done in standard form and recorded on computer • collated and reviewed every 6 months to assess quality and consider improvements

  24. Age Gender Occupational group Age when started smoking Cigs per day Expired air CO Time to first cigarette of the day Experience of urges to smoke Longest time without smoking previously Time since most recent quit attempt What led back to smoking Medical problems Psychological problems Current medication and other ongoing treatment Information needed about smokers

  25. Information about treatment • Choice of medication • Degree of adherence to medication • Number of sessions offered • Number of sessions attended • Type of support offered (individual or group) • Components of support included

  26. Information about outcome • 4-week outcome • whether smoked at all in past 2 weeks • expired air CO • Longer term outcome (s) • follow-up point • whether not smoking at all • duration of abstinence • expire-air CO

  27. www.ncsct.co.uk

  28. NHS Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training (NCSCT) • Undertake research to determine competences necessary for effective behavioural support for smoking cessation • Develop and apply assessments of practitioners based on those competences • Develop and deliver training to help staff achieve the required standard • Provide continuing professional development based on the latest research findings

  29. NHS Stop Smoking Services ... • need a cadre of professional stop smoking practitioners • registered • trained • assessed for competence • certified • working in well-run services • using the best evidence-based methods and medications • networked and supported • keeping accurate records • engaging with continuing professional development

  30. Key points • Motivating smokers to stop involves: • enthusiastically offering help to all smokers at least once a year, not asking about intention to stop first • Helping smokers to stop involves: • a well-run service with a cadre of certified Stop-Smoking Practitioners offering: • multi-session behavioural support • NRT-plus (patch plus fast acting form) or Champix • keeping accurate records and regularly evaluating how performance can be improved

  31. www.ncsct.co.uk

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