Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States. Effective treatment for tobacco dependence exists and includes counseling and pharmacotherapy with nicotine replacement, bupropion, or varenicline. The health care system is a key channel for delivering this treatment to smokers. Brief clinical interventions delivered at office visits increase smoking cessation rates, are among the most cost-effective of medical interventions, and are recommended by U.S. Public Health Service. However, physicians and other clinicians often fail to provide them. Clinicians' rates of providing tobacco treatment in ambulatory care can be improved, but even when successful, clinicians can only reach smokers who make an office visit. A health care system might improve its delivery of tobacco treatment by supplementing visit-based efforts with a population-based strategy, using methods proven effective in public health settings. A population of smokers could be identified from electronic health records and offered treatment proactively in a way that maximizes convenience and minimizes barriers such the cost of pharmacotherapy. This study tests the effectiveness of a population-based Direct-to-Smoker (DTS) outreach program provided to smokers in one community health center in Revere, MA, that is part of an integrated health care system. It uses the system's population management tools to identify smokers and proactively offers them evidence-based tobacco treatment that is free and does require making an office visit. A randomized controlled trial will compare the effectiveness of the DTS program to usual primary care. The hypothesis is that adding the DTS program to usual primary care will increase the proportion of smokers who use tobacco dependence treatment and thereby stop smoking.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
590
Intervention group participants will be sent 3 letters at monthly intervals signed by the participant's PCP, encouraging the smoker to quit, and offering a free telephone consultation by Partners' Tobacco Treatment Coordinator (TTC). Participants can respond to the treatment offer by calling or emailing the TTC, who will provide a 15-minute consultation following the "5A" strategy recommended by the US Public Health Service's clinical guideline and help smokers access treatment by (1) offering a free 4-week supply of 21mg nicotine patches sent by secure mailing to their home (refillable once for a total of 8 weeks), (2) helping smokers obtain prescriptions from their PCP for other FDA-approved smoking cessation medication, (3) using a fax-referral system to facilitate connection to free multi-session counseling from the Massachusetts Smokers Quitline, and (4) referring to local in-person counseling programs.
Revere Health Center
Revere, Massachusetts, United States
proportion of participants who reported using any tobacco dependence treatment during the 3-month study period
Tobacco dependence treatment is defined as (1) any smoking cessation counseling contact (with the Tobacco Treatment Coordinator, the Massachusetts Smokers Quitline, or in-person counseling) or (2) any FDA-approved smoking cessation pharmacotherapy (nicotine patch, gum, lozenge, inhaler, or nasal spray; bupropion; or varenicline).
Time frame: 3 months
7-day point prevalence abstinence from tobacco products
tobacco abstinence, defined as self-reported 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 3-month follow-up
Time frame: 3 month follow-up
30-day point prevalence abstinence from tobacco products
Tobacco abstinence, defined as self-reported 30-day point prevalence abstinence at 3-month follow-up
Time frame: 3 month follow-up
Use of nicotine replacement therapy
Use of nicotine patch, gum, lozenge, inhaler, or nasal spray in the past 3 months.
Time frame: Past 3 months
Use of any tobacco cessation medication
Use of any nicotine replacement product, varenicline, or bupropion in the past 3 months in order to quit smoking
Time frame: Past 3 months
Use of smoking cessation counseling
Use of telephone or in-person smoking cessation counseling in the past 3 months
Time frame: Past 3 months
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