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Be a Lifesaver! Help your Clients Quit.

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Title: Be a Lifesaver! Help your Clients Quit.


1
Be a Lifesaver!Help your Clients Quit.
Your Name Title Agency
2
Smoking kills more Americans than all of the
following combined
  • AIDS
  • Alcohol
  • Motor vehicle injuries
  • Fires
  • Heroin
  • Cocaine
  • Homicide
  • Suicide

3
Tobacco Use in Michigan
  • Heart Disease, Cancer, Stroke, and COPD are the
    four leading causes of death in Michigan and all
    associated with smoking
  • Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of
    death
  • Second hand smoke is the third leading
    preventable cause of death

4
TobaccoA Risk Factor for Chronic Disease
  • Tobacco use is a known or probable cause of more
    than 25 specific diseases and is an important
    cause of chronic disease.1
  • In 2007, 39 of the working-age population
    reported at least one chronic health condition.2
  • Integration of tobacco dependence treatment into
    chronic disease programs is recognized as a CDC
    Best Practice.

5
Smoking reduces life expectancy an average of
about 14 years by way of lung cancer, heart
disease other illnesses, according to the CDC.
6
People with serious mental illness die 25 years
younger than the general population, largely due
to conditions caused or worsened by smoking.
  • National Association of State Mental Health
    Program Directors. Morbidity and Mortality in
    People with Serious Mental Illness. Thirteenth in
    a Series of Technical Reports. Alexandria, VA
    2006.

7
What is Tobacco Costing us?
8
High Personal and Societal Cost
  • Number one preventable cause of death in the US
  • 1 in 5 deaths are attributed to tobacco (Healthy
    People 2010, 2005)
  • 480,000 deaths attributed to smoking, annually
    (U.S. Surgeon General 2014)
  • Enormous cost - 280 billion (U.S. Surgeon
    General 2014)
  • Direct medical cost
  • Indirect cost lost productivity and earnings
  • Medicaid cost
  • Medicare cost

9
Royal Caribbean's Radiance of the Seas
10
Michigans Personal Costs
  • Each year 14,500 14,800 Michigan Residents die
    prematurely due to their own smoking.

11
Secondhand Smoke causes
  • 50,000 U.S. deaths a year (DHHS 2006)
  • (3,000 from lung cancer, 46,000 from heart
    disease and 430 from sudden infant death)
  • US Surgeon Generals Report on Secondhand
    Smoke 2006
  • In Michigan, between 1,500 and 2,400 residents
    die annually from secondhand smoke
  • Hundreds of studies show adverse health effects
    in adults and children

12
Tobacco Addiction A Chronic Disease?
13
Tobacco Dependence A Chronic Disease
  • Similar to diabetes, heart failure, hypertension,
    hyperlipidemia
  • Expectation for remission and relapse
  • Provide ongoing treatment
  • advice/counseling
  • support
  • appropriate pharmacotherapy

14
Tobacco DependenceA Chronic Disease
  • There is a spectrum of disease severity
  • Effective treatments are available
  • High dose and multi-drug regimens may be
    necessary to achieve the target goals
  • May require referral to specialists
  • Individualized therapy is important

15
Nicotine is a Drug of Addiction
  • After inhaling, nicotine reaches the brain in
  • 7-10 seconds
  • Euphoria without being Stoned
  • Immediate REINFORCEMENT of drug-taking behavior
  • Nicotine activates reward pathways in the brain
  • Moment to moment titration of dose to achieve the
    desired effects

16
How Can You Help Your Clients Fight Back?
17
Clinicians Can Make a Difference!
  • Treatment delivered by a variety of clinician
    types increases abstinence rates.
  • Treatments delivered by multiple types of health
    care providers (nurse, medical assistant,
    psychologist, social worker or dentist) are more
    effective than interventions delivered by a
    single type of clinician.

18
You Can Do It!
  • As few as 3 minutes of counseling or other
    primary care interventions can increase the
    success rate of smoking cessation!6

19
Most of the following slides are taken directly
from two documents
  • Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence
  • Quick Reference Guide for Clinicians
  • 2008 Update
  • and
  • A how-to packet for implementing the US Public
    Health Service Clinical Practice Guidelines

20
The 5 A Intervention
  • ASK about Tobacco Use (Tobacco as a vital sign)
  • ADVISE to stop
  • ASSESS willingness to make an attempt
  • ASSIST in the stop attempt
  • ARRANGE for a follow-up visit
  • Not since the polio vaccine has this nation
    had a better opportunity to make a significant
    impact in public health.
  • -- David Satcher, MD,MPH US Surgeon General
  • 1998-2002

21
The "5 A's" Model for Treating Tobacco Use and
Dependence - 2008
22
Ask
  • Systematically identify all tobacco users at
    every visit

23
Advise
  • Strongly urge all tobacco users to quit
  • In a clear, strong, and personalized manner, urge
    every tobacco user to quit.
  • Clear Important, cutting down not enough
  • Strong Most important thing you can do to
    protect your health
  • Personalized link to current symptoms and
    health concerns, social and or economic situations

24
Assess
  • Determine willingness to make a quit attempt at
    the time
  • If the patient is willing to participate in
    intensive treatment deliver such treatment or
    make a referral
  • Modify for special populations
  • Dont want to quit? provide motivational
    intervention

25
Assist
  • Aid the patient in quitting
  • Pharmacologicalif not contraindicated
  • Set a quit date
  • Counseling
  • Skills training-Anticipate Challenges
  • Problem solving
  • Social Support
  • Intra-treatment social support
  • Extra-treatment social support

26
Combinations Medication and Counseling
Effectiveness of and estimated abstinence rates
for the combination of counseling and medication
versus medication alone (n 18 studies)
Treatment Number of arms Estimated odds ratio (95 C.I.) Estimated abstinence rate (95 C.I.)
Medication alone 8 1.0 21.6
Medication and counseling 39 1.3 (1.1, 1.6) 27.0 (22.7, 31.4)
27
Medication
  • Seven first-line medications shown to be
    effective and recommended for use by the
    Guideline Panel
  • Bupropion SR
  • Nicotine Gum
  • Nicotine Inhaler
  • Nicotine Lozenge
  • Nicotine Nasal Spray
  • Nicotine Patch
  • Varenicline

28
Guidelines for pharmacotherapy
  • Second line Pharmacotherapies
  • Clonidine
  • Oral
  • Transdermal
  • Nortriptyline
  • Lighter smokers - lower NRT
  • 10-15 cigarettes/day
  • no adjustment for bupropion SR or varenicline

29
Possible Side Effects for all Nicotine
Replacement products
  • Dizziness
  • Nausea
  • Headaches
  • Should not be used after recent MI (2 weeks)

30
NRT Indicators
  • Anyone who smokes gt 10 cigarettes per day
  • Anyone who reports withdrawal symptoms during a
    past quit attempt
  • Each quit attempt is different so okay to try
    same medication again motivation may have
    shifted
  • All NRTs are better than placebo

31
Rationale for Nicotine Replacement
  • Prevention/relief of nicotine withdrawal symptoms
  • Allows patients time to develop strategies to
    avoid relapse
  • Avoids the exposure to carcinogens in cigarette
    smoke
  • Allows for controlled tapering of the nicotine
  • Improves success of quitting

32
E-Cigarettes
  • E-cigarettes (or electronic cigarettes) are
    battery powered devices that claim to provide
    inhaled doses of nicotine by way of a vaporized
    solution.

33
E-Cigarettes
  • Are NOT FDA approved for treating tobacco
    dependence.
  • Do not have dosage recommendations and have
    varying levels of nicotine.
  • Contain detectable levels of carcinogens and
    toxic chemicals.
  • There is no scientific evidence that e-cigarettes
    help smokers quit.

34
Arrange schedule follow up
  • Timing
  • Quit week
  • First month
  • Follow-up conversation

35
Motivational InterviewingFor the Patient
Unwilling to Quit
  • Express empathy
  • How important do you think it is for you to
    quit? What might happen if you quit?
  • Develop discrepancy
  • It sounds like you are very devoted to your
    family/ friends/job. How do you think your
    smoking is affecting your children/relationships/w
    ork?
  • Roll with resistance
  • Sounds like you are feeling pressured about your
    smoking. Would you like to hear about
    strategies that can help you address your
    concerns when you quit?
  • Support self-efficacy
  • So you were fairly successful the last time you
    quit.

36
Diagnosis and Billing Codes
  • ICD-9 305.1 Tobacco Use Disorder will become
  • ICD-10 F17.2 Nicotine Dependence with multiple
    use subsections (October 1, 2015)
  • CPT 99406
  • Intermediate
  • Smoking and tobacco-use cessation counseling
    visit more than 3 minutes, up to 10 minutes.
  • CPT 99407
  • Intensive
  • Smoking and tobacco-use cessation counseling
    visit more than 10 minutes.

37
Resources to Help you Succeed!
38
Michigan Patient Resources
  • The Michigan Department of Community Health has
    online quit kits. To print on demand go to
    www.michigan.gov/tobacco
  • American Cancer Society offers printed material
    and sponsors the Great American Smokeout on the
    third Thursday in November. Call 1-800-227-2345.
    www.cancer.org
  • American Heart Association offers printed
    material. Call 1-800-242-8721.
    www.americanheart.org
  • American Lung Association offers quit smoking
    classes, printed material, cessation website.
    Call 1-800-586-4872. Telephone referral and
    cessation advice is available by calling
    1-866-784-8937. www.lungusa.org
  • National Cancer Institute offers a quit kit and
    telephone advice at 1-877-44U-QUIT.
    www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/smoking

39
Michigan Patient Resources
  • Nicotine Anonymous at 415-750-0328.
    www.nicotine-anonymous.org
  • QuitNet Online Smoking Cessation
    www.quitnet.com
  • Try to Stop A website offering an online quit
    smoking program called Quit Wizard.
    www.trytostop.org
  • BecomeanEX A website offering an online quit
    smoking program. www.becomeanex.org
  • U.S. Public Health Service offers a free booklet,
    You Can Quit Smoking Now! Call 1-800-QUITNOW.
    www.surgeongeneral.gov/tobacco

40
Provider Cessation Resources
  • http//www.aafp.org/tobacco.xml American Academy
    of Family Physicians Ask and Act
  • MI Providers Tobacco Cessation Tool Kit
    www.michigancancer.org/WhatWeDo/tob-providerstoolk
    it.cfm
  • University of Wisconsin Center for Tobacco
    Research Intervention offers videos and other
    tobacco training materials at www.ctri.wisc.edu
  • Web-based training offered by the State of
    Michigan at www.michigan.gov/tobacco

41
Telephone Quitlines
42
Tobacco Quitlines
  • Work in conjunction with clinician or health care
    worker intervention.
  • Can provide the treatment intensity that often
    cannot be provided in an office setting due to
    time constraints.
  • Increase access to treatment and reduce barriers
  • Can provide assistance in multiple languages.

43
The Michigan Tobacco Quitline
  • 1-800-QUIT-NOW (784-8669)
  • 1-877-777-6534 (TTS)
  • Counseling appointments available between 7 am to
    1 am EST
  • Provides
  • Referrals to local programs
  • One time counseling
  • Intensive counseling proactive sessions
  • Unlimited reactive calls for one year
  • Free NRT to the uninsured
  • Self-help materials
  • Free text messaging and online program

44
Michigan Tobacco Quit Line Services
  • All Michigan Callers Receive
  • Information Referral, Text Messaging
  • Medicaid Veterans
  • Counseling
  • 4 sessions for general enrollees
  • 9 sessions for prenatal
  • Medicare, Uninsured, Prenatal, Cancer Patients
    County Health Plan
  • Counseling (same as above)
  • Up to 8 weeks of nicotine patch, gum or lozenge

45
Enhanced Prenatal Protocol
  • Began February 1, 2012
  • There are specially trained counselors whose time
    is dedicated to working with prenatal callers
  • Prenatal enrollees will receive 9 counseling
    calls-5 prior to delivery and 4 post-partum
  • Prenatal enrollees receive incentives for
    participation

46
Prenatal Quitline Poster
47
Who Qualifies for Counseling?
  • Medicaid, including MOMS
  • Medicare
  • Veterans
  • Uninsured
  • People with a Cancer Diagnosis
  • Prenatal
  • County Health Plans
  • Youth 13-17 (no insurance information is
    collected)

48
Michigan Quit Line Fax Referral Form for Health
Care Providershttps//michigan.quitlogix.org/prov
iders_partners/default.aspx
49
With Special Thanks to
  • Gregory S. Holzman, MD, MPH
  • Formerly, Chief Medical Executive, MDCH
  • Linda Thomas, MS
  • Formerly,Tobacco Consultation Service,
    University of Michigan Health Systems
  • Many of the slides in this presentation were
    borrowed from previous lectures.

50
References
  • Department of Health and Human Services (US).
    The Health Benefits of Smoking Cessation A
    Report of the Surgeon General. Rockville (MD)
    Department of Health and Human Services, National
    Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
    Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health 1990.
  • Ha T. Tu, Genna Cohen. Financial and Health
    Burdens of Chronic Conditions Grow. Tracking
    Report No. 24. Center for Studying Health System
    Change. Washingron, DC 2009.
  • Maciosek MV, Coffield AB, Edwards NM, Flottemesch
    TJ, Goodman MJ, Solberg LI. Priorities among
    effective clinical preventive services results
    of a systematic review and analysis. American
    Journal of Preventive Medicine 200631(1)5261.
  • Miller DP, Villa KF, Hogue SL, and
    Sivapathasundaram D. (2001). Birth and first-year
    costs for mothers and infants attributable to
    maternal smoking. Nicotine and Tobacco Research,
    3, 25-35.
  • Benowitz, N. Nicotine Addiction. Tobacco Use and
    Cessation 26(3)611-631, 1999
  • United States Preventive Services Task Force,
    2009

51
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  • Agency
  • Phone
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