Health care systems are key channels for delivering tobacco cessation treatment to the smokers in a population. A population-based approach could complement office-based care and offload busy clinicians. The project will conduct population-based proactive outreach to current smokers in a health care system's primary care practices and randomize smokers who respond to the outreach to 3 groups: 2 alternative evidence-based cessation resources or to usual care. Specific Aims: Aim 1: To determine the feasibility and reach of the program Aim 2a: To determine whether the 2 intervention arms combined increase the proportion of smokers who use tobacco cessation treatment over a 6-month follow-up compared to those randomized to usual clinical care. Aim 2b: To determine whether each of the two intervention arms increases the proportion of smokers who use tobacco cessation treatment over a 6-month follow-up, compared to those receiving usual clinical care.
Health care systems are key channels for delivering tobacco cessation treatment to the smokers in a population. Current health care system approaches require busy clinicians with many competing demands on their time to initiate treatment in the course of clinical encounter. A population-based approach is an alternative that could complement office-based care and offload busy clinicians. The ongoing evolution of the health care system is making this more feasible with adoption of electronic health records (EHR) that document patients' smoking status in a coded field. This facilitates the creation of a registry of smokers who can be offered tobacco treatment proactively. However, the optimal way to implement a proactive population health strategy for tobacco users is unclear. The goal of the project is to implement a population-based proactive outreach program to current smokers in a health care system's primary care practices. The program will 1. Proactively contact smokers independent of their health care visits and 2. Connect smokers who respond to evidence-based tobacco cessation resources available in the health care system and/or community. The study aims of the study are to: Aim 1: To determine the feasibility and reach of the program. Aim 2a: To determine whether the two intervention arms combined increase the proportion of smokers who use tobacco cessation treatment over a 6-month follow-up, compared to those receiving usual clinical care. Aim 2b: To determine whether each of the two interventions increases the proportion of smokers who use tobacco cessation treatment over a 6-month follow-up, compared to those receiving usual clinical care. Exploratory aim: To compare the 7-day point prevalence smoking cessation rate in each intervention arm to usual care.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
234
This individual will primarily initiate, guide, and optimize adherence to the care that others deliver, rather than providing direct care his or herself. S/he will call the smoker to conduct a brief assessment of tobacco use and readiness to quit, offer brief counseling and motivational intervention, describe the available pharmacologic and behavioral options, help the smoker to choose among them, and link the smoker to chosen resources. The resources offered will include both internal (health care system based) and external (community based) tobacco cessation resources.
Massachusetts (MA) Helpline services include an assessment of smoking history and readiness to quit, advice to quit, self-help materials and telephone counseling. For smokers who set a quit date in the next 30 days, the Helpline offers up to 5 proactive telephone counseling calls with options for text messaging and web-based resources. It also provides eligible smokers 4 weeks of free nicotine patch or gum mailed to their home.
Participants will be given the number to the MA Smokers Helpline and advised to contact their primary care provider for additional assistance in quitting smoking.
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Proportion of patients who are provided any evidence-based tobacco cessation treatment (as defined below), comparing pooled intervention groups (Internal Care Coordination + External Community Referral) vs Usual Care
Any tobacco cessation treatment was defined as any of the following: (1) in-person visit with the practice-based tobacco counselor; (2) completion of \>1 Quitline counseling call (excluding the initial registration call in which the participant was transferred from the interactive voice response \[IVR\] system); (3) telephone contact with the study's Tobacco Coach (excluding the initial call after enrollment); (4) outpatient prescription for nicotine replacement, bupropion, or varenicline in the EHR; or (5) provision of nicotine replacement by the Quitline. Information was obtained from the EHR, research program records, practice-based tobacco counselor records, and the Quitline provider, National Jewish Health
Time frame: 6 months
Proportion of patients who are provided any evidence-based tobacco cessation treatment (defined below), comparing Internal Care Coordination vs. Usual Care
Any tobacco cessation treatment was defined as any of the following: (1) in-person visit with the practice-based tobacco counselor; (2) completion of \>1 Quitline counseling call (excluding the initial registration call in which the participant was transferred from the IVR system); (3) telephone contact with the study's Tobacco Coach (excluding the initial call after enrollment); (4) outpatient prescription for nicotine replacement, bupropion, or varenicline in the EHR; or (5) provision of nicotine replacement by the Quitline. Information was obtained from the EHR, research program records, practice-based tobacco counselor records, and the Quitline provider, National Jewish Health
Time frame: 6 months
Proportion of patients who are provided any evidence-based tobacco cessation treatment (defined below), comparing External Community Referral vs. Usual Care
Treatment defined as above
Time frame: 6 months
Proportion of patients who are provided any evidence-based tobacco cessation treatment (defined below), comparing Internal Care Coordination vs. External Community Referral
Treatment defined as above
Time frame: 6 months
Proportion of patients reporting cigarette abstinence for the past 7 days (point-prevalence abstinence measure)
Proportion of patients who report that they have not smoked a cigarette in the past 7 days on a telephone survey (point-prevalence abstinence measure)
Time frame: 6 months
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