Comparative Effectiveness of Postdischarge Smoking Cessation Interventions for Hospital Patients: The Helping HAND 4 Randomized Clinical Trial

IMPORTANCE: Smoking cessation interventions for hospitalized patients must continue after discharge to improve long-term tobacco abstinence. How health systems can best deliver postdischarge tobacco treatment is uncertain. OBJECTIVE: To determine if health system–based tobacco cessation treatment af...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of internal medicine (1960) 2022-08, Vol.182 (8), p.814-824
Hauptverfasser: Rigotti, Nancy A, Chang, Yuchiao, Davis, Esa M, Regan, Susan, Levy, Douglas E, Ylioja, Thomas, Kelley, Jennifer H. K, Notier, Anna E, Gilliam, Karen, Douaihy, Antoine B, Singer, Daniel E, Tindle, Hilary A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IMPORTANCE: Smoking cessation interventions for hospitalized patients must continue after discharge to improve long-term tobacco abstinence. How health systems can best deliver postdischarge tobacco treatment is uncertain. OBJECTIVE: To determine if health system–based tobacco cessation treatment after hospital discharge produces more long-term tobacco abstinence than referral to a community-based quitline. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This randomized clinical trial was conducted September 2018 to November 2020 in 3 hospitals in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. Cigarette smokers admitted to a study hospital who received brief in-hospital tobacco treatment and wanted to quit smoking were recruited for participation and randomized for postdischarge treatment to health system–based Transitional Tobacco Care Management (TTCM) or electronic referral to a community-based quitline (QL). Both multicomponent interventions offered smoking cessation counseling and nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) for up to 3 months. Data were analyzed from February 1, 2021, to April 25, 2022. INTERVENTIONS: TTCM provided 8 weeks of NRT at discharge and 7 automated calls with a hospital-based counselor call-back option. The QL intervention sent referrals from the hospital electronic health record to the state quitline, which offered 5 counseling calls and an NRT sample. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The main outcome was biochemically verified past 7-day tobacco abstinence at 6 months. Self-reported point-prevalence and continuous tobacco abstinence and tobacco treatment utilization were assessed 1, 3, and 6 months after discharge. RESULTS: A total of 1409 participants (mean [SD] age, 51.7 [12.6] years; 784 [55.6%] women; mean [SD] 16.4 [10.6] cigarettes/day) were recruited, including 706 randomized to TTCM and 703 randomized to QL. Participants were comparable at baseline, including 216 Black participants (15.3%), 82 Hispanic participants (5.8%), and 1089 White participants (77.3%). At 1 and 3 months after discharge, more TTCM participants than QL participants used cessation counseling (1 month: 245 participants [34.7%] vs 154 participants [21.9%]; 3 months: 248 participants [35.1%] vs 123 participants [17.5%]; P 
ISSN:2168-6106
2168-6114
DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2022.2300