Clinical perspectivesPhysician-delivered interventions for smoking cessation: Strategies for increasing effectiveness
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Assessing efficacy of a web-based smoking cessation tool - QuitAdvisorMD: Protocol for a practice-based, clustered, randomized control trial
2024, Contemporary Clinical Trials CommunicationsDesign and participant characteristics of a randomized-controlled trial of telemedicine for smoking cessation among rural smokers
2014, Contemporary Clinical TrialsCitation Excerpt :In 2009, the prevalence of smoking in non-metropolitan areas was 26%—equivalent to the U.S. prevalence of smoking in 1990 [3]. Physicians play an important role in the smoking cessation process, [4] as they see 70% of all smokers each year [5]. However, physicians face many barriers to routinely counseling patients who smoke [6–9].
Adjunctive therapy and management of the transition of care in patients with heart failure
2014, Cardiology ClinicsAdoption, reach and effectiveness of computer-based, practitioner delivered and combined smoking interventions in general medical practices: A three-arm cluster randomized trial
2012, Drug and Alcohol DependenceCitation Excerpt :Increased morbidity and mortality has been attributed to tobacco use, and primary care physicians are in a unique position to reduce tobacco use by advising and assisting patients to quit smoking (Ockene, 1987).
Development and evaluation of an instrument for assessing brief behavioral change interventions
2011, Patient Education and CounselingIntroduction to Integrative Primary Care: The Health-Oriented Clinic
2010, Primary Care - Clinics in Office PracticeCitation Excerpt :In a study by Frank and colleagues,33 patients counseled by a physician who revealed brief information about her own healthy dietary and exercise practices, and had a bike helmet and apple visible on her desk, considered her to be healthier, more believable, and more motivating than patients in a control group who did not receive this kind of disclosure. Considering that brief advice from a physician leads to a spontaneous quit rate of 2% to 4%, just from asking about tobacco use, it is reasonable to infer that inquiring about other health behaviors would effect real change also.13,14 One proposal involves formal reviewing of major areas of lifestyle that promote disease prevention and wellness with every annual physical examination.