Community pharmacies can help people quit smoking

"Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians play a pivotal role in providing effective support for tobacco treatment and other related health issues," says Robin Corelli. "Being part of the local community is important and we need sustainable models for providing these services." (Credit: Getty Images)

Community pharmacies may play a key role in helping people quit smoking, a new study shows.

The findings provide valuable insights into the implementation of tobacco cessation services within community pharmacies while identifying barriers to further improvements.

Tobacco use remains a leading preventable cause of death. Although two thirds of people who smoke would like to quit, many individuals trying to quit on their own are not successful. To address this gap, the study explored how pharmacists and pharmacy technicians could assist in providing tobacco cessation support.

The study, published in the journal Pharmacy, involved seven independent community pharmacies in California affiliated with the Community Pharmacy Enhanced Services Network. A total of 22 California pharmacists and 26 pharmacy technicians who underwent tobacco cessation training participated.

“Community pharmacies are important partners to expand access to tobacco cessation services,” says Elisa Tong, an internist ate University of California Davis Health and director of the cancer center’s Tobacco Cessation Policy Research Center. “By state law, pharmacists can furnish all forms of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) without a provider prescription.”

California’s law allowing pharmacists to provide the cessation tool took effect in 2014. Eligible pharmacists must complete two hours of tobacco training and follow the state-approved protocol, which consists of reviewing patients’ current tobacco use and prior quit attempts, screening for appropriateness of NRT, providing medication counseling, and addressing or referring patients for behavioral counseling.

Tobacco cessation has been integrated into the curricula of California pharmacy schools since 2000, and many other training programs are available for pharmacies.

“After completing tobacco treatment training, our research showed that pharmacies successfully initiated cessation services,” says senior author Karen Hudmon from Purdue University College of Pharmacy. “Compatibility with existing workflows, staff buy-in, and the crucial role of pharmacy technicians significantly helped.”

Continued research efforts are underway to study policy implementation strategies, especially for pharmacist reimbursement. California’s law authorizes Medi-Cal and private insurance to pay pharmacies for enhanced services including education and medication management.

Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians play a pivotal role in providing effective support for tobacco treatment and other related health issues,” says coauthor Robin Corelli, a UC San Francisco pharmacy faculty member. “Being part of the local community is important and we need sustainable models for providing these services.”

Given that 89% of Americans live within five miles of a community pharmacy, they can be convenient locations for receiving health care services. Pharmacists have shown to be effective in helping patients quit. They can reach uninsured and under-resourced patients as well as patients living in rural areas who might experience barriers to accessing primary care. However, the study showed certain barriers exist to making pharmacy cessation programs effective.

The research showed that billing complexities, software limitations, and training gaps for handling complicated patient cases all pose challenges to successful implementation of tobacco cessation services at pharmacies.

However, the data collected implied a forward-thinking health care model where the pharmacists and their staff can play a fundamental and dynamic role in local health management, and ultimately, in cultivating a healthier population. The study serves as a valuable resource for policymakers, health care professionals and stakeholders in population health efforts to combat tobacco use.

The National Cancer Institute and the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program, which also supports the Tobacco Cessation Policy Research Center at UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center, funded the work.

The cancer center’s new Tobacco Cessation Policy Research Center will continue to examine the role of pharmacies in helping people quit smoking. The center is also studying the integration of tobacco treatment at substance use disorder facilities. Other tobacco-related research focuses on equal access to tobacco treatment provided by public insurance plans and engaging with enforcement of flavored tobacco sales restrictions.

Additional coauthors are from Indiana University, the University of Wyoming, Western University of Health Services, and Purdue University.

Source: UC Davis