Effectiveness of a hospital-initiated smoking cessation programme: 2-year health and healthcare outcomes

BackgroundTobacco-related illnesses are leading causes of death and healthcare use. Our objective was to determine whether implementation of a hospital-initiated smoking cessation intervention would reduce mortality and downstream healthcare usage.MethodsA 2-group effectiveness study was completed c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tobacco control 2017-05, Vol.26 (3), p.293-299
Hauptverfasser: Mullen, Kerri A, Manuel, Douglas G, Hawken, Steven J, Pipe, Andrew L, Coyle, Douglas, Hobler, Laura A, Younger, Jaime, Wells, George A, Reid, Robert D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BackgroundTobacco-related illnesses are leading causes of death and healthcare use. Our objective was to determine whether implementation of a hospital-initiated smoking cessation intervention would reduce mortality and downstream healthcare usage.MethodsA 2-group effectiveness study was completed comparing patients who received the ‘Ottawa Model’ for Smoking Cessation intervention (n=726) to usual care controls (n=641). Participants were current smokers, >17 years old, and recruited during admission to 1 of 14 participating hospitals in Ontario, Canada. Baseline data were linked to healthcare administrative data. Competing-risks regression analysis was used to compare outcomes between groups.ResultsThe intervention group experienced significantly lower rates of all-cause readmissions, smoking-related readmissions, and all-cause emergency department (ED) visits at all time points. The largest absolute risk reductions (ARR) were observed for all-cause readmissions at 30 days (13.3% vs 7.1%; ARR, 6.1% (2.9% to 9.3%); p
ISSN:0964-4563
1468-3318
DOI:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2015-052728