Title: ABC: a lifesaving intervention for smokers
1ABC a lifesaving intervention for smokers
- Vicki Oldfield and Dorothy Clendon
- Ministry of Health
2The risks of smoking are large
- About half of long term smokers die from a
smoking-related disease - On average they lose 15 years of life
- 25 of smokers die in middle age
- Around 5000 smoking-related deaths each year
3The size of the problem
Tobias M, Templeton R, Collings S. Tob Control.
2008 Oct17(5)347-50. Epub 2008 Jul 3
4Cigarette consumption in New Zealand
Tobias M, Templeton R, Collings S. Tob Control.
2008 Oct17(5)347-50. Epub 2008 Jul 3
5Prevalence of smoking and depression
Depressed Patients
General Population
26
44
56
74
Current Smokers
Nonsmokers
Farrell et al. Int Rev Psychiatry. 20031543-49
Mackay et al. The Tobacco Atlas. 2nd ed. 2006.
6Smoking prevalence in nursing staff
- Smoking prevalence in nurses is less than 15,
but
29 of mental health nurses smoke
ASH-KAN AOTEAROA ASSESSMENT OF SMOKING HISTORY,
KNOWLEDGE AND ATTITUDES OF NURSES IN NEW ZEALAND.
Available online at www.ash.org.nz
7Impacts of Smoking Health Effects
- Psychiatric patients who smoke have
- Higher incidence of illicit drug use
- Poorer treatment compliance
- Lower Global Assessment Functioning (GAF) score
- More hospitalisations
- Higher medication doses
Williams et al. Addict Behav. 2004291067-1083
Dalack et al. Am J Psychiatry. 19981551490-1501
Montoya et al. Am J Addict. 200514(5)441-454.
8Impacts of Smoking - Financial Implications
- Smoking imposes a significant financial burden
Monthly Budget (in a sample of people with
schizophrenia)
Cigarettes
Food, Shelter, Other
Steinberg et al. Tob Control. 200413206-208.
9Stopping smoking works
- There are benefits from quitting at any age
- Smokers who quit before age 35-40 reduce their
risk of dying early to that of a non-smoker over
time - Most smokers want to quit
- 69 of smokers tried to quit in last 5 years
- 44 of smokers tried to quit at least once in the
last year - Maori, Pacific and young smokers and those with
mental illness are just as likely to have tried
to quit - NZ Tobacco Use Survey 2006
- There is a gap between current and best practice
10Why Increase Quit Attempts?
Aveyard and West. Managing Smoking Cessation. BMJ
200733537-41
11ABC a simple reminder to provide brief advice
routinely
- New Zealand Smoking Cessation Guidelines
- A Ask whether a person smokes
- B give Brief advice to quit to all people who
smoke and - C make an offer of Cessation treatment
provide and/or refer - This replaces the 5 As
12Brief Advice
- The key to increasing quit rates is to prompt
more smokers to make more supported quit attempts
more often - Importantly brief advice by health professionals
is proven to be effective - NNT 40
- Brief advice is just that brief! It is not a
counseling session - The purpose is to prompt a smoker to consider or
make a quit attempt
Silagy C, Stead LF. Physician advice for smoking
cessation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev
13 Cessation Support - Effective treatments
- Pharmacological
- Nicotine replacement therapy
- Varenicline
- Bupropion
- Nortriptyline
- Behavioural
- Telephone support
- - Quitline
- Txt-based support
- Face-to-face support
- - Aukati Kai Paipa
- - Local Cessation Practitioners
- Effective interventions can improve success
rates by up to 300 - Ministry of Health. New Zealand Smoking
Cessation Guidelines. 2007
14Is Cessation Safe in the Mentally Ill?
- Anxiety disorders
- No evidence of exacerbation of anxiety disorders.
- Schizophrenia
- Not associated with exacerbation of psychosis.
- Depression
- Mixed evidence regarding exacerbation of
depressive symptoms.
15Some real life evidence
- In an observational study comparing NRT with
varenicline - 412 smokers seeking treatment (111 with mental
illness) from a UK NHS stop smoking clinic - Validated short-term quit rates
- Results showed
- Varenicline was superior to NRT
- Varenicline equally effective in mentally ill and
non-mentally ill persons - No worsening of mental illness observed.
Stapleton J, et al. Addiction (2007) 103 146-154.
16Supporting ABC in practice
- Making NRT more available
- Increased range and capacity of cessation
services - Improving referral systems between
primary/secondary care and cessation services - Training in ABC
- Improving data collection and feedback
17- Training designed for Healthcare Professionals
- www.smokingcessationabc.org.nz
- An internet based, e-learning tool
- 20-40 minutes to complete
- Endorsed by RNZCGP (CME points)
- Printable certificate (for credit towards
professional development) - Register as a Quit Card provider
18- Smoking is too big to ignore
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