Title: History of Hospital SmokeFree Policies
1SMOKING CESSATION,BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE
- Linda Thomas, MS
- Manager Smoking Cessation Program
- Tobacco Consultation Service
- University of Michigan Health System
- Ann Arbor, Michigan
2Welcome
- Participant lines are listen only until the Q A
period at the end of the presentation - The teleconference coordinator will give
instructions to participants to ask questions - If you are disconnected, please call
I-800-620-7939 and ask to be reconnected - Power Point Slides are available on Ohio KePROs
web site - at www.ohiokepro.com
3 Objectives of the Teleconference
- Describe the essential steps in the development
- and implementation of a smoke free campus.
- Identify three (3) grant sources.
- List four (4) options for reimbursement for
- smoking cessation counseling.
4Questions
5Continuing Education Credits
- To get your free nursing CE credits
- Stay online for the entire call
- Complete the evaluation document on paper or on
line - Online at http//www.ohiopro.com/smokeeval.asp
- OR
- Fax at 216-654-1510
- Complete evaluation within 14 days of the
telephone conference
6Contact Us
Call us toll free on the Ohio KePRO Provider QIC
Line 1-800-385-5080 OR E-mail us at
Hospital_at_ohqio.sdps.org
7History of Hospital Smoke-Free Policies
- Late 1970s/early 1980s eliminate sale of
tobacco products in the hospital, introduce
smoke-free wards and a few smoke-free areas. - 1978 survey - only 42 of hospitals had any
anti-smoking regulations 1.2 had a total
smoking ban inside the building.
8History (cont.)
- 1988 survey 90 of hospitals had some form of
internal restrictions. - 1988 Only 8 of hospitals had smoke-free
buildings. - 1991 JCAHO standards issued.
- 1993 inspection 95.6 were complying with the
standards.
9We need to
- Change attitudes of our traditional health care
system as well as the community
10Most Important First Steps
- Change attitudes
- Change roles
- Change standards of health care
11Who Needs to Be Involved?
- All physicians/PAs/NPs
- Communities
- Legislation
- Health insurance companies
- Hospitals
12Multi-Action Plan
- Total ban on smoking both indoors and outdoors.
- Identify and treat all admitted patients who are
tobacco users. - Provide outpatient smoking cessation for all
patients, visitors, and employees.
13Multi-Action Cessation Plan Will
- Allow cessation efforts to reach broad base of
population - Improve health, production, and cost of employees
- Set example for community and the rest of health
care system
14To change the nature of clinical practice to
address universally and systematically the
leading preventable cause of morbidity and
mortality in our community.
15SELF FIRST
- All current policies and protocols were reviewed
- Smoking on hospital property was evaluated
- Team evaluation of possible changes and their
implications - Recommendations implement a smoke-free campus
offer free smoking cessation counseling
develop a timeline for implementation - Administrative approval obtained
16Self Continued
- Policy change and timeline notifications
circulated to staff and physicians - Free smoking cessation offered to all staff
- Approval obtained for staff insurance provider to
cover nicotine replacement therapy - Signs ordered and handout informational cards
made - Policy was implemented, promoted and celebrated
17Policy and Protocol Review
- Hospital smoking policy for patients, visitors
and staff was reviewed --- Compliance with
smoking only in the designated smoking areas was
not being adhered. - Smoking was occurring outside all the entrances
of the hospital and enforcement of the policy was
not being addressed. - No procedures, policies or protocols existed on
the inpatient units for interventions to be
offered to patients who were smokers.
18Team Evaluation
- Literature search done to explore best practice
models - Resources procured from numerous sources (ALA,
ACS, AHA, NCI) Cost and reimbursement issues
evaluated - Recommendations developed and presented to
Administration for approval - ( American Lung Association American Cancer
Society American Heart Association National
Cancer Institute)
19Recommendations
- Collaborate with other area health care providers
- Establish a smoke-free campus
- Identify smokers at the time of admission
- Offer tobacco cessation counseling to all
inpatient smokers - Provide cessation counseling to staff,
outpatients and the community -- free of charge - Develop tracking mechanisms to document
effectiveness -
20Policy Changes and Timeline Development ( 4
months)
- Smoke-free campus policy developed and shared
with hospital staff for feedback and input - Letters sent to area hospitals inviting a joint
endeavor - Approval obtained with new hospital insurance
carrier to cover nicotine replacement therapy - Letter and a copy of the Clinical Guidelines sent
to all physicians (offer made to provide the NCI
training program How to Help Your Patients Stop
Smoking).
21Continued Policy Changes and Timeline
Development
- Free smoking cessation counseling services made
available to staff, physicians, community and
inpatients - Signs, brochures and informational cards obtained
- In-services held at unit meetings
- Smoke-free campus implemented with goodies
(sugarless candy straws)