The Physician-Delivered Smoking Intervention Project: factors that determine how much the physician intervenes with smokers
Authors
Ockene, Judith K.Adams, Abigail
Pbert, Lori
Luippold, Rose S.
Hebert, James R.
Quirk, Mark E.
Kalan, Kathryn L.
UMass Chan Affiliations
Department of Family Medicine and Community HealthDepartment of Medicine, Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine
Document Type
Journal ArticlePublication Date
1994-07-01Keywords
AdolescentAdult
Aged
Algorithms
Analysis of Variance
Humans
Middle Aged
Patient Compliance
*Physician's Role
Physician-Patient Relations
Regression Analysis
Smoking Cessation
Life Sciences
Medicine and Health Sciences
Women's Studies
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine factors that affect how much physicians trained to use a patient-centered smoking intervention intervene with their smoking patients. DESIGN: Forty internal medicine residents and ten internal medicine attending physicians trained in a patient-centered counseling approach were randomized to an algorithm condition (provision of intervention algorithm at each patient visit) or a no-algorithm condition. Smoking intervention steps used by physicians with patients were assessed with Patient Exit Interviews (PEIs). SETTING: Ambulatory clinic; academic medical center. PATIENTS: Five hundred twenty-seven adult smokers seen in clinic between June 1990 and April 1992. MAIN RESULTS: There was no difference in overall PEI scores or in individual PEI steps taken between the algorithm and no-algorithm conditions. Two patient baseline factors (reporting thinking of stopping smoking within six months and higher Fagerstrom Tolerance Score) and one physician factor (older age) were significantly predictive of higher PEI score. CONCLUSION: Provision of an intervention algorithm at each patient visit does not increase the likelihood that trained physicians who are cued to intervene will perform more of the intervention steps taught. Trained physicians are more likely to intervene with smokers who are more nicotine-dependent and who expect and desire to stop smoking.Source
J Gen Intern Med. 1994 Jul;9(7):379-84.
DOI
10.1007/BF02629517Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/50819PubMed ID
7931747Related Resources
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/BF02629517