Title: Statewide Comprehensive Tobacco Cessation
1Statewide Comprehensive Tobacco Cessation
- Wendy Bjornson, MPH
- Pacific Center on Health and Tobacco
2Why Hasnt Cessation Been a Higher Priority?
- Tobacco control movement started with research
and campaigns to help people stop. - Effective clinical methods were developed.
- Behavioral science - designed around a clinical
behavioral model small group therapy. - Effective medications were developed initially
prescriptions, medical supervision were required
added to clinical model. - Clinical model was too limiting didnt meet
needs of broad populations.
3Why Hasnt Cessation Been a Higher Priority?
- Population based policy approaches were
discovered and found to be effective. - Price increases
- ETS restrictions
- Advertising restrictions
- Sales to minors enforcement
- Initial experiments with population based
cessation approaches were ineffective were not
evidence-based. - Clinical models too limiting population
approaches ineffective. Conclusion Cessation
doesnt work.
4Why is cessation becoming more of a priority?
- Despite ineffectiveness of first population based
approaches, research has continued. - Effective population based approaches have
evolved Now, Cessation works. - Implementation strategies have been developing
somewhat separately beginning to come together. - Momentum is building as effectiveness increases
and as tobacco control movement changes poised
to coalesce into a tobacco cessation movement.
5What are the changes in the tobacco control
movement?
- Changes in policies restricting smoking in public
places together with price increases are
motivating more tobacco users to try to stop. - Tobacco control has been successful in
stimulating more quit attempts. - Most of these tobacco users try to quit on their
own and most fail. - Tobacco users are 2-3 times more likely to quit
with help than on their own. - Goal is to increase number of assisted quit
attempts. New cessation strategies can work.
6Why is funding for cessation becoming a priority?
- Assistance to stop smoking costs 300 - 500
(counseling and medications). - Tobacco control advocacy for tax increases
together with state economic problems have
resulted in increased tobacco taxes in many
states almost none of these revenues are used to
help people stop smoking. - Nationally,about half of tobacco users are
economically disadvantaged cant afford help.
7What Do We Need to Do?
- Opportunity Cessation approaches can now help
reach public health goals. - Challenge Need programs and policies to set up,
deliver, and finance evidence-based services with
limited public funding.
HOW? Partnership approach to statewide
comprehensive tobacco cessation programs.
8Comprehensive Tobacco Cessation
- Evidence-based, state funded quitlines
- Cessation services in conjunction with community
and health care services. - Benefit coverage through employers, public
insurance programs and other health care
purchasers. - Innovative and culturally sensitive community
development and population based approaches to
reach disparate populations
Health Community Services
Purchasers Employers
Quitlines
Community Development
9Quitlines
- Play a central role through
- Direct counseling
- Central resource for materials, information and
referrals triage callers. - Easily accessible, convenient, economies of scale
- Multi-language, culturally tailored services
- Trained staff quality assurance
10Health Care and Community Services
- Need system that makes advice and referral from
health care professionals routine evidence
based. - Health and community services can make services
integral part of clinic visits. - Give personal advice
- Refer tobacco users who are ready for services
(e.g.quitlines) - Prescribe medications
- Record in charting systems
- Service delivery can be included in
administrative and billing health information
systems monitor for quality improvement.
11Benefit Coverage
- Benefits through
- Employers both public and private
- Publicly funded insurance programs Medicaid,
Medicare, HIS, FQHCs, mental health and
substance abuse programs. - Need to build partnerships and demonstrate how
effective tobacco cessation is a good investment
in a health workforce.
12Community Development/Tailored Population-Based
Approaches
- Key issue for reaching disparate populations is
how access to health services is affected by SES. - About half of tobacco users in US are
economically disadvantaged affects access and
affordability of health services. - Some economically disadvantaged also face
cultural, language, geographic hurdles often
missed by existing health services. - Community development using creative partnerships
are needed e.g.the health care safety net
clinics. - Tailored population-based approaches e.g.
multi-language quitlines.
13Comprehensive Tobacco Cessation Strategy Two
Directions
- Develop service infrastructure.
- Develop a network of that links and promotes a
variety of affordable services, including
services reaching disparate populations, and that
use multi-service quitlines. - Develop partnerships that lead to increasing
access to services through better coordination
and systems changes. - Conduct outreach campaigns public opinion and
health care policy changes. - Communication strategies that influence social
norms for seeking and using services. Getting
help is good vs.Do it yourself. - Promote health care policy changes that increase
benefit coverage.
14Comprehensive Tobacco Cessation
- Regardless of which strategic direction and
projects are agreed on first, a central
requirement is to make assistance to stop a
higher priority among policy makers and funders,
within health care, and among tobacco users.
15Getting Started
- First step create a state working group with
dedicated staff. - Role of the working group is to
- provide leadership.
- determine the initial strategic direction that is
most suited to the resources and environment of
the state. - serve as a catalyst.
16Assessment
- Assess current needs including
- Quality and availability of cessation services.
- Funding and funding possibilities.
- Who is served and who is not.
- Policy environment.
- Determine strategic direction.
17Infrastructure Development Quitlines
- Fund and set up a quitline.
- Quitlines provide economy of scale and can serve
as a centralized resource for services and
information. (CDC Quitline Resource Guide.) - Advocate for funding if not in place.
18Infrastructure Development Networks
- Reach out to health care and communities to link
and/or expand existing services. - Develop systems that promote referrals into
health system services (and quitlines). - Make services more available within health
systems - Make services available to uninsured.
19Networks Examples of Projects
- Massachusetts Quitworks referral project
- Arizona Helpline Client Referral Program and
Provider Training - Maine Medication Voucher Program and Provider
Training - Minnesota Health care referral partnerships
- Oregon Quitting Connection referral project
20Changing Health Care Systems and Policies
- Promote tobacco treatment as part of standard
benefit for health insurers. - Promote increased demand from employers for
tobacco treatment in contracts with health
insurers. - Promote changes in public opinion leading to
increased consumer demand. - Advocate for tobacco treatment in government
health care policies directed to priority
populations.
21Changing Health Care Systems and Benefits
Policies Examples of Projects
- California Consortium of health care purchasers,
insurers and providers collaborating on
strategies and polices to make cessation a
standard health care benefit. - Oregon Make It Your Business outreach to
employers and media advocacy campaign.
(tobaccofreeoregon.org) - North Carolina Prevention Partners outreach to
businesses - Federal legislation Medicaid, Medicare, MCHB
22Infrastructure Policy Changes to Reach
Disparate Populations
- Provide services for all tobacco users
- Includes specialized strategies for reaching and
covering services for the uninsured and other
disparate populations. - Advocating for publicly funded services to
include tobacco cessation assistance. - Uses community development approaches to reach
tobacco users who are not part of regular health
care system. - Uses tailored population based approaches such as
multi-language quit lines.
23Disparities Examples of Projects
- California Help Line provides services in
multiple languages. - Washington quitline provides services and
medications for the uninsured. - Arizona community outreach to Hispanic and Native
Americans. - Alameda County smoking as a vital sign project
in community health clinics.
24Strategies It Depends
- What is possible depends on what is happening and
who is involved. - Take advantage of opportunities.
- Include cessation focus in tobacco control
campaigns e.g. part of enforcement of workplace
restrictions earmarking of tobacco tax
increases highlighting cessation services and
quitline to help defend budgets. - Partnerships with other health initiatives e.g.
maternity and chronic disease case management. - Business, union benefit contract negotiations.
25Strategies It Depends
- Leaders and partners can develop longer-term
strategies for phasing-in cessation initiatives. - Develop new messages.
- Polling to reframe smokers are bad messages to
smokers have a right to treatment to help them
quit. Note reframed messages are essential for
working with new partners (e.g. employers, unions)
26PCHT Reports and Resources
- Available or coming soon on PCHT Website
www.paccenter.org
27Pacific Center on Health and Tobacco
- Consortium of representatives from health
departments, researchers, advocacy coalitions,
health plans, and business from five western
states California, Arizona, Oregon, Washington,
Hawaii. - National partners CDC, CTC, CTFK, SmokeLess
States. - Develop strategies for statewide tobacco
cessation cessation approaches. - Goal Promote widespread adoption of
evidence-based methods for improving the
availability and accessibility of tobacco
cessation services.
28PCHT Members
- Arizona
- Dept of Health Services, TEPP
- Arizona Smokers Helpline
- University of Arizona
- California
- Bay Area Community Resources
- Integrated Healthcare Association
- Next Generation Tobacco Control Alliance
- California Department of Health Services
- California Smokers Helpline
29PCHT Members
- Hawaii
- Coalition for a Tobacco-Free Hawaii
- Hawaii Community Foundation
- Kalhi Palama Health Center
- Oregon
- Tobacco-Free Coalition of Oregon
- Oregon Department of Human Services, Health
Services - Oregon Research Institute
30PCHT Members
- Washington
- GHC Center for Health Promotion
- Department of Health
- Centers for Disease Control
- Center for Tobacco Cessation
- National Center for Tobacco-Free Kids
- SmokeLess States Project
31PCHT Contact Information
Wendy Bjornson, MPH, Director Pacific Center on
Health and Tobacco 1200 Naito Pkwy.
220 Portland, OR. 97209 (503) 236-0361
(phone) (503) 872-9336 (fax) wendy_bjornson_at_qwest.
net