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Engaging primary care in smoking cessation

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63% 'did not have time to offer treatments' 61% 'thought it was ineffective' ... A meeting on a smoking related topic eg COPD, CHD, stroke, asthma, diabetes etc ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Engaging primary care in smoking cessation


1
Engaging primary carein smoking cessation
  • Dr Alex Bobak
  • GPSI (GP with a Special Interest) in Smoking
    Cessation Wandsworth, South West London

2
GPs The key to raising PCT quit rates
  • Smokers see their GP about 5 times per year
  • GPs are paid to know who smokes and give advice
  • GPs are best placed for opportunistic
    intervention and personalised advice1
  • Patients want GPs help to stop smoking2
  • Great potential for GPs to increase PCT quit
    rates

1. Parrott et al., 1998. 2. Kviz et al., 1997.
3
Great Potential
  • GPs are the biggest source of referrals to the
    NHS stop smoking services
  • But they typically only refer a fraction of their
    smokers
  • And they often give poor advice on how to stop
  • Why is this?
  • Attitudes
  • Training

4
GP attitudes to Smoking Cessation
  • 93 believe that helping a patient stop smoking
    is the best thing we can do for their health
  • BUT.
  • 63 did not have time to offer treatments
  • 61 thought it was ineffective
  • 40 felt they lacked skills
  • 23 not their job

5
GP training in smoking cessation
  • Most GPs think they have a reasonable
    understanding about smoking cessation BUT THEY DO
    NOT!!!!

6
GP training in smoking cessation
  • Most GPs think they have a reasonable
    understanding about smoking cessation BUT THEY DO
    NOT!!!!
  • No training as medical students

7
GP training in smoking cessation
  • Most GPs think they have a reasonable
    understanding about smoking cessation BUT THEY DO
    NOT!!!!
  • No training as medical students
  • No training as junior doctors

8
GP training in smoking cessation
  • Most GPs think they have a reasonable
    understanding about smoking cessation BUT THEY DO
    NOT!!!!
  • No training as medical students
  • No training as junior doctors
  • No training as GP trainees

9
GP training in smoking cessation
  • Most GPs think they have a reasonable
    understanding about smoking cessation BUT THEY DO
    NOT!!!!
  • No training as medical students
  • No training as junior doctors
  • No training as GP trainees
  • No training as GPs

10
GP training in smoking cessation
  • Most GPs think they have a reasonable
    understanding about smoking cessation BUT THEY DO
    NOT!!!!
  • No training as medical students
  • No training as junior doctors
  • No training as GP trainees
  • No training as GPs
  • Views on smoking cessation built on everyday
    experience, not evidence eg smoking is a
    lifestyle choice not a disease

11
GP training in smoking cessation
  • Most GPs think they have a reasonable
    understanding about smoking cessation BUT THEY DO
    NOT!!!!
  • No training as medical students
  • No training as junior doctors
  • No training as GP trainees
  • No training as GPs
  • Views on smoking cessation built on everyday
    experience, not evidence eg smoking is a
    lifestyle choice not a disease
  • Myths about smoking are common among GPs

12
GPs Knowledge on Nicotine
  • Incorrect beliefs about nicotine in cigarettes
  • 51 think it causes cardiovascular disease
  • 49 think it causes strokes
  • 41 think it causes lung cancer

13
GPs Knowledge on Nicotine
  • Incorrect beliefs about nicotine in cigarettes
  • 51 think it causes cardiovascular disease
  • 49 think it causes strokes
  • 41 think it causes lung cancer
  • 6 think NRT is as harmful as cigarettes!

14
QOF (Quality and Outcomes Framework)
  • Big financial incentive to engage GPs in smoking
    cessation or at least provide brief interventions
  • But has not improved smoking prevalence in
    practices
  • 2 aspects to QOF for smoking cessation
  • get smoking status
  • give smoking advice
  • But no guidance as to what is good advice...

15
VIDEO CLIP OF BAD AND GOOD GP BRIEF
INTERVENTIONS
16
30 Second Approach Questions
  • Do you smoke? or Are you still smoking? (QOF
    POINT)
  • Would you like to stop?
  • Would you like help to stop because the best
    proven way is with support from a trained stop
    smoking adviser plus treatment? (QOF POINT)
  • Direct to LSSS adviser

17
Bad intervention
  • Confrontational put the smoker off the GP let
    alone a quit
  • Told the smoker to stop rather than how to stop
  • It was negative and didnt offer anything new
  • Much longer - appointment might overrun
  • GP frustrated and smoker irritated
  •  
  • Put GP and smoker off helping and being helped

18
30 second approach
  • Shorter and so easier to use routinely
  • Positive and so kept the smoker engaged
  •  
  • New ideas on how to stop not old arguments on why
  • Evidence based we know that a combination of
    support and treatment does greatly increase long
    term quit rates
  • Gives the GP QOF with conscience!

19
What do many GPs do now?
  • Practice non evidence based smoking cessation
  • Offer brief intervention of variable quality
  • Prescribe inappropriately
  • Give poor advice on treatments
  • Offer inadequate support
  • Have poor understanding of their local stop
    smoking service

20
What can be done?
  • Educate GPs in the why and how of brief
    interventions
  • Educate GP staff in brief interventions and some
    to become stop smoking advisers
  • Engage practices in delivering good quality
    smoking cessation

21
Educating GPs
  • GPs do not willingly go to meetings on smoking
    cessation!!

22
Educating GPs
  • GPs do not willingly go to meetings on smoking
    cessation!!
  • Best to slot the training session in to an
    established meeting such as
  • A meeting on a smoking related topic eg COPD,
    CHD, stroke, asthma, diabetes etc
  • A PCT protected learning time meeting
  • Regular postgraduate GP meetings (often at
    lunchtime at the local PGMEC or large GP
    practices)
  • GP trainee meetings via the local GP training
    scheme

23
Educating GPs
  • GPs do not willingly go to meetings on smoking
    cessation!!
  • Best to slot the training session in to an
    established meeting such as
  • A meeting on a smoking related topic eg COPD,
    CHD, stroke, asthma, diabetes etc
  • A PCT protected learning time meeting
  • Regular postgraduate GP meetings (often at
    lunchtime at the local PGMEC or large GP
    practices)
  • GP trainee meetings via the local GP training
    scheme
  • Think what a GP needs to know- not the same as an
    adviser

24
Educating GPs
  • GPs do not willingly go to meetings on smoking
    cessation!!
  • Best to slot the training session in to an
    established meeting such as
  • A meeting on a smoking related topic eg COPD,
    CHD, stroke, asthma, diabetes etc
  • A PCT protected learning time meeting
  • Regular postgraduate GP meetings (often at
    lunchtime at the local PGMEC or large GP
    practices)
  • GP trainee meetings via the local GP training
    scheme
  • Think what a GP needs to know- not the same as an
    adviser
  • Concentrate on brief intervention training

25
Educating GP staff
  • Practice Nurses AND Health Care Assistants
  • Much more willing
  • Avoid delegation if possible
  • Existing workload
  • Motivation
  • Good way to engage a practice

26
How to engage a practice
  • Make a financial case first
  • Make a health case second!
  • Emphasise no extra work for the GP
  • Emphasise patient satisfaction

27
Financial Case
  • To the practice manager
  • Explain HCA can deliver smoking cessation after a
    free two day course
  • Doesnt have to be Dr or Practice Nurse
  • Demonstrate practice profit if possible
  • QOF (not just smoking points)
  • LESs (Locally Enhanced Services)
  • Data capture and other projects to fill DNAs

28
Health Case
  • Take care with the Duty of care argument!
  • Talk about NNTs in General Practice
  • NNTs are the Number (of patients) Needed to Treat
    to make or prevent a health outcome
  • You can compare the benefits of smoking cessation
    compared with other interventions in general
    practice

29
Comparative NNTs
1. Bandolier 2. Gates, Am Fam Phys 2001.
30
Numbers Needed to Treat (NNT) to Obtain 1
Long-Term Quitter?
  • Brief advice (lt5 mins) 40(1)
  • Adding medication to behavioural support..
  • NRT 20(2)
  • Bupropion 15(2)
  • Varenicline 8(2)

1. West (2006) 2. Cochrane Review. (2007)
31
Numbers Needed to Treat (NNT) to Prevent a
Premature Death?
  • Brief advice (lt5 mins) 80
  • Adding medication to behavioural support..
  • NRT 40
  • Bupropion 30
  • Varenicline 16

32
Summary
  • Great potential for referrals from GPs
  • Understand GP attitudes and knowledge (or not!)
    of smoking cessation
  • Engage practice staff
  • Educate where you can
  • Focus on brief interventions..
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