Health & Medicine - Posted by Courtney McCrimmon-Pittsburgh on Wednesday, January 16, 2013 13:38 - 1 Comment    
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Pregnant smokers get subpar help to quit

"Since active help with resources and strategies to quit are a key component to successful cessation, we need to bridge the gap in provider-patient communication so that obstetricians, nurse practitioners, and other providers who interact with patients can more effectively address cessation with their pregnant smokers," says study author Judy Chang. (Credit: iStockphoto)

U. PITTSBURGH (US) — To help pregnant women quit smoking, healthcare providers need better communication training, according to a study that finds conversations on the topic averaged just 47 seconds.


The study, published this week in the American Journal of Health Promotion, reviews audio-recorded discussions between obstetric care providers and their pregnant patients to assess whether or not providers adhered to the “Five A’s” for smoking cessation communication.

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Read the original study

DOI: 10.4278/ajhp.110624-QUAL-265

Previous studies have shown that patients are more likely to quit smoking when care providers ask whether the patient smokes, advise cessation, assess the patient’s willingness and challenges to explore cessation, assist the patient with strategies and resources for cessation, and arrange follow-up to specifically address patients’ progress and efforts to quit.

“Very few of the providers we observed performed the recommended Five A’s related to successful patient smoking cessation,” says Judy Chang, a physician-researcher with Magee-Womens Research Institute (MWRI) and lead investigator of the study.

“Instead, providers seemed more likely to give patients some general information on smoking and smoking cessation, but very rarely did they assess patients’ motivations and barriers to quitting, provide assistance with specific strategies or resources for smoking cessation, or arrange specific follow-up to monitor cessation efforts and progress.”

Chang and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine recruited 301 pregnant women who agreed to have their first obstetric visit audio-recorded. A total of 139 reported being current smokers.

While care providers regularly asked about smoking (98 percent of visits), only a third of the visits contained either advice to quit or assistance with cessation approaches or resources. In only 22 percent of the visits did providers assess motivations or barriers to quit and in none of the visits did the providers arrange specific follow up regarding the cessation progress.

None of the care providers adhered to all of the Five A’s and the average amount of time spent talking about smoking cessation was 47 seconds.

“Currently, giving information about smoking seems to be the main component of cessation counseling. However, prior research shows that knowledge alone is not enough to motivate behavior change,” says Chang.

“Since active help with resources and strategies to quit are a key component to successful cessation, we need to bridge the gap in provider-patient communication so that obstetricians, nurse practitioners, and other providers who interact with patients can more effectively address cessation with their pregnant smokers.”

The Scaife Family Foundation, the American Professors of Gynecology and Obstetrics/Abbot Medical Education Foundation, the Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women’s Health Award, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and the National Institutes of Health supported the research.

Source: University of Pittsburgh

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vulcan
Feb 20, 2013 18:02

It just goes to show how addictive cigarettes are when mothers, fully aware of the potential harm being done continue to smoke throughout their pregnancy. It’s not so much the nicotine but the thousands of other harmful chemicals involved. I think hospitals and should be obliged to encourage women who can’t quit to at least use electronic cigarettes. Ok, it’s not an ideal solution but ANYTHING is better then puffing away on tobacco.

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