While sitting in the dentist’s office, Hollings Cancer Center
researcher Matthew Carpenter, Ph.D., of the Medical University of South
Carolina, had a bright idea.
As he received his goody bag with dental hygiene products, he
wondered why not conduct a study and have primary care providers do the
same thing for their patients who use tobacco. The bags would contain
educational material, free lozenges and tobacco cessation medications to
encourage people to stop smoking.
Results from the study, recently published online in Addiction,
weren’t surprising to Carpenter. He and colleagues found providing
smokers with a free, two?week starter kit of nicotine replacement
therapy (NRT) increased quit attempts, use of stop smoking medications,
and smoking abstinence as compared with standard care in a primary care
setting.
“Not a day went by in this study when I was not excited by it because
I knew that we were having an impact on real patients in the real world
with their doctors,” Carpenter said. “This gets the patients to know
that their doctor cares, and they have something they can use right
now.”
Carpenter believes a smoker’s annual visit to the doctor creates the
perfect window of opportunity for a physician to provide a quick
intervention, while providing tools to help smokers begin the process of
quitting. Along with advice on why and how a patient should stop
smoking, a person should be able to walk away with a product they can
use immediately to try and stop their dependence on nicotine.
“About 70 percent of smokers will see their primary care providers on
a yearly basis,” Carpenter said. “It’s a clinical encounter to do
something, but I think we can offer them tools other than words.”
In the U.S., 34 million adults currently smoke cigarettes and nearly
70 percent of U.S. adults who smoke say they want to quit, according to
the 2020 Surgeon General’s Report.
The $2 million study, Tobacco Intervention in Primary Care: Treatment
Opportunities for Providers, also known as Tip Top, included 22 clinics
throughout South Carolina and was conducted in collaboration with the
National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA). A total of 1,245 patients
participated in the study.
The study included 652 patients from 12 of the clinics who only
received advice on the importance of quitting smoking. The remaining 593
patients at 10 clinics were provided with samples of medication to use
including nicotine patches and lozenges. During the study, all smokers
were advised to quit through a regular conversation with their
physician.
They also received information and resources to help them quit
smoking and information about Quitline, a tobacco cessation service
available through a toll-free telephone number.
Carpenter said that the study was well-received by primary care
providers, who welcomed the goody bag as a conversation starter. “The
doctors are giving something that is concrete and immediately
actionable,” Carpenter said. “The patient can go home and use the
products that day.”
During this study, 26 percent of patients who received the NRT
samples achieved at least one week without smoking. “If you can achieve
seven days in a row of not smoking, I’m going to call that success,”
Carpenter said.
The study also found that 12 percent of patients were quit at final
follow-up (six months). While this may seem a modest amount, it’s more
than 150 patients who potentially will save thousands in medical costs
if they are able to quit smoking, all for just the cost of a $70
intervention. “That has to be cost-effective no matter you slice it,”
says Carpenter.
On average, it takes a patient seven to 10 attempts of trying to quit
smoking before becoming successful, so interventions such as this can
be helpful in the process. Even for the smokers who didn’t use the
products, it planted a seed, he said.
An interesting finding during this study showed that the smoking
cessation bags with information and medication were more beneficial to
patients who had a lower income, lower education or if they were in the
more rural areas of the state. The finding on income, education, and
rurality is an area Carpenter would like to study more in the future.
“It’s about access,” Carpenter said. “We’re helping people who are struggling out there to find and succeed in treatment.”
Given the toll of smoking-related health conditions, Carpenter said
he hopes insurance companies will see the value and provide funding in
the future so that primary care physicians could offer this to their
patients. The concept also could be used for smokers who are leaving the
hospital, or even those who have been incarcerated.
“These samples can be given out almost universally – even to smokers
who may not want to quit and who may not yet be ready to try
medications,” Carpenter said. “It’s a pragmatic and brief intervention
that takes minutes to deliver and is scalable as an intervention to be
used a variety of settings.”
Smoking cessation reduces the risk of twelve cancers, including
cancers of the lung; larynx; oral cavity and pharynx; esophagus;
pancreas; bladder; stomach; colon and rectum; liver; cervix; kidney; and
acute myeloid leukemia.
Carpenter said the intervention provides patients a starting point to
their journey of becoming smoke-free and it’s simple to use for primary
care providers, who don’t feel pressured to have a long lecture. They
can just offer their patients support.
“This is about cancer prevention. Smoking cessation is cancer prevention,” Carpenter said.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-02/muos-bii020720.php
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