Core Competencies – Health Professionals and Tobacco
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Core Competencies – Health Professionals and Tobacco
Elin Roddy
BASSP
September 2007
Aims and Objectives
• To ensure that all NHS staff directly involved with patient care meet a basic set of core competencies to enable them to identify and support smokers who want to stop smoking
• http://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/cessationcompetencies
Where this fits – NICE guidance
• Brief chats between people who smoke and health professionals about stopping smoking are both effective and cost effective in helping people to stop smoking.
• All health professionals should advise all smokers to stop smoking, not just those who are already ill
• Advice should be sensitive to individual needs.
NICE public health guidance: focus on smoking cessation and physical activity http://www.nice.org.uk/page.aspx?o=300139
The role of the health care professional - what prompted an attempt to stop smoking?
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
Family/friend
Health professional
Advert
Poster
Restrictions
Health Problem
%%Base: 672 smokers currently trying to stop or made attempt to stop in past year.Base: 672 smokers currently trying to stop or made attempt to stop in past year.West R. Getting Serious About Stopping Smoking. A Report for No Smoking Day 1997West R. Getting Serious About Stopping Smoking. A Report for No Smoking Day 1997
Aims and Objectives
• Knowledge
• Skills
• Attitudes
• Additional competencies for prescribers
Knowledge
• Effects of smoking on health
• Implications of addiction to nicotine
• Cessation strategies available to help smokers to quit
• Local smoking cessation services available
Benefits of quitting smoking Benefits of quitting smoking
Men Women
Lifeexpectancy
Extra yearscompared to
smokers
Lifeexpectancy
Extra yearscompared to
smokers
Smoked until death
69.3 73.8
Never smoked 78.2 8.9 81.2 7.4
Quit at age 35 76.2 6.9 79.9 6.1
Quit at age 45 74.9 5.6 79.4 5.6
Quit at age 55 72.7 3.4 78.0 4.2
Quit at age 65 70.7 1.4 76.5 2.7
Taylor et al, AM J Public Health 2002;92:990-6
Speakers notes:
Smokers die earlier than non-smokers.The estimated gain in life expectancy from quitting at given ages is clinically significant at all ages.If the pension age goes up to 70, then most male smokers will die before they collect their pension.
________________
Taylor DH, Jr., Hasselblad V, Henley SJ, Thun MJ, Sloan FA. Benefits of smoking cessation for longevity. Am J Public Health 2002;92:990-6
Skills
• Identifying all smokers
• Delivering brief opportunistic smoking cessation advice to all smokers
• Assessment of patient’s commitment to quit
• Referring to local specialist smoking cessation services
Understanding smoking behaviour
• Health effects of nicotine/ smoke• Withdrawal syndrome• Address misconceptions around quitting:
• ‘Smoking helps me deal with stress’• ‘I’ll put on weight’• ‘The odd one won’t hurt’• ‘I’ve switched to roll ups’
Attitudes
• Non-judgemental approach to smokers • Acknowledge role of addiction and
importance of support
- Most smokers do not choose to smoke but do so because they are addicted
- Most smokers will not be able to give up without support
- Smokers have equal rights too
Additional slides – specialty specific health effects and additional competencies for prescribers
Smoking Cessation by specialty
RespiratoryOncologyCardiologyGastroenterologyRheumatologySurgeryPsychiatryPaediatricsPregnancy
QOL and Survival in Lung Cancer
• Current smoking is predictor of shortened lung cancer survival*
• May be mediated by biologic effects
• Graces et al: Persistent smoking negatively impacted QOL scores
*Tammemagi, CHEST January 2004
Effects of smoking on health - Effects of smoking on health - Psychiatry• Studies on people with mental illness living in the
community show high smoking rates - 70% in people with schizophrenia, 56% with depression (vs. 28% of population)
• People with severe mental illness tend to smoke more cigarettes per day and have a high morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular and respiratory disease
• However, mental health problems do not undermine the ability to stop smoking.
• Stopping smoking does not appear to exacerbate psychotic symptoms and that experience of depression does not affect quit rates.
• Patients with mental health problems need equality of access to smoking cessation support.
Additional skills for prescribers
• Knowledge of indications for and side-effects of nicotine replacement therapy and bupropion
• Skills in prescribing the above treatments to support a quit attempt
Speed of nicotine delivery
Cut Down Then Stop (CDTS)
• New indication for NRT• Using NRT to reduce number of cigarettes by
50% leads to long-term cessation• Nicorette gum and inhalator now licensed for this
indication• Useful for eg. smoke-free hospitals, where
patients may not want to quit but need to reduce number of cigarettes smoked
Assessment Questions
• Questions have four stems each of which may be true or false, apart from Question 4 where only one stem is correct
• Answers can be found in the speakers notes accompanying each question
Question 3 – Cessation strategies
1. Half of smokers would like to stop smoking
2. Willpower alone is the most effective way to stop smoking
3. Around a quarter of those smokers trying to quit do so because of advice from a health professional
4. Switching to roll-ups is less harmful than smoking cigarettes
Summary
• A free and (hopefully) useful resource
• Available via the BTS website at
• http://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/cessationcompetencies
• Comprehensive speaker’s notes enable ‘non-experts’ to teach on tobacco
• Overall aim is to broaden the reach of smoking cessation advice
Acknowledgements
• British Thoracic Society Tobacco Committee• David Ross• Angela Hurlstone, Chris Routh, Sheila Edwards
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