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    Date Issued2000 - 2003 (2)1991 - 1999 (1)Author
    Hollis, Jack F. (3)
    Ockene, Judith K. (3)Bonollo, Debra (1)Emmons, Karen M. (1)Gerace, Terence A. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Medicine, Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine (3)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordHumans (3)Adult (2)Counseling (2)Follow-Up Studies (2)Life Sciences (2)View MoreJournalHealth psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association (1)Medical care (1)Preventive medicine (1)

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    Developing and testing new smoking measures for the Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set

    Pbert, Lori; Vuckovic, Nancy; Ockene, Judith K.; Hollis, Jack F.; Riedlinger, Karen (2003-04-01)
    OBJECTIVE: To develop and test items for the Health Plan Employee Data and Information Set (HEDIS) that assess delivery of the full range of provider-delivered tobacco interventions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The authors identified potential items via literature review; items were reviewed by national experts. Face validity of candidate items was tested in focus groups. The final survey was sent to a random sample of 1711 adult primary care patients; the re-test survey was sent to self-identified smokers. RESULTS: The process identified reliable items to capture provider assessment of motivation and provision of assistance and follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: One can reliably assess patient self-report of provider delivery of the full range of brief tobacco interventions. Such assessment and feedback to health plans and providers may increase use of evidence-based brief interventions.
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    Relapse and maintenance issues for smoking cessation

    Ockene, Judith K.; Emmons, Karen M.; Mermelstein, Robin J.; Perkins, Kenneth A.; Bonollo, Debra; Voorhees, Carolyn C.; Hollis, Jack F. (2000-01-01)
    This article reviews short-term (6 months) and longer term (12-24 months) maintenance of cessation and relapse in adult smokers and the factors and treatments that affect these outcomes. MedLine and PsycLIT searches were done for research published in English between 1988 and 1998 meeting a defined set of criteria. Intensive intervention, telephone counseling, and use of pharmacotherapy were found to improve outcomes; however, compared with public health approaches, they reach relatively few smokers. Brief interventions during medical visits are cost-effective and could potentially reach most smokers but are not consistently delivered. Predictors of relapse include slips, younger age, nicotine dependence, low self-efficacy, weight concerns, and previous quit attempts. Potential areas for research, recommendations for longer follow-up assessments, and standard definitions for slip, relapse, and long-term maintenance are discussed.
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    Smoking cessation and change in diastolic blood pressure, body weight, and plasma lipids. MRFIT Research Group

    Gerace, Terence A.; Hollis, Jack F.; Ockene, Judith K.; Svendsen, Kenneth H. (1991-09-01)
    Cigarette smoking cessation was examined for its impact on diastolic blood pressure, weight, and plasma lipids in 3,470 special intervention males in the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial. Change in smoking status (quitters vs nonquitters) was not independently associated with change in diastolic blood pressure or the subsequent use of antihypertensive medication for smokers who were normotensive at entry. More quitters (35%) became hypertensive than nonquitters (27%, P less than 0.01), although the groups had similar baseline diastolic blood pressure levels. Weight gain subsequent to cessation probably contributed to this excess incidence of hypertension in quitters. Stepped-care antihypertensive therapy lowered diastolic blood pressure similarly for hypertensive quitters and nonquitters. Weight increases of 6 lb or more by the 72-month visit occurred in 47% of quitters vs 25% of nonquitters (P less than 0.01); quitters did not differ from nonquitters in their change in total kilocalories from baseline to the 72-month visit. Quitters who gained 6 lb or more tended to be less obese at baseline, be less physically active, and smoke more cigarettes per day than those who did not gain this amount. Finally, quitters relative to nonquitters experienced an adjusted increase of 2.4 mg/dl high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, but no difference in total or low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. The implications for intervention are discussed as they relate to the common, but not inevitable, increase in weight subsequent to cessation.
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