Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4194784 American Journal of Preventive Medicine 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundTelephone counseling for tobacco cessation is an effective and evidence-based approach to address tobacco use. The wide dissemination of region- and state-level quit lines has been a major goal for public health agencies. However, connecting patients in primary care settings to state-level quit lines has not been evaluated.MethodsObservational study describing two methods (fax referral and providing a brochure) to connect private physician offices with a state-level quit line in Oregon. This study describes the resources required to create a clinical pathway for the 5A’s in primary care (ask, advise, assess, assist, and arrange) using a state-level telephone quit line as an intervention for cessation in primary care clinics sharing a common electronic medical record system, focusing on the costs and generalizability of this approach.ResultsOf the 15,662 smokers identified in 19 primary care clinics, 745 patients were referred to the Oregon Tobacco Quit Line during the study period. The program cost in the first year was $15 to $22 per patient connected with the quit line; in subsequent years, the cost decreased to $4 to $6 per quit-line connection.ConclusionsConnecting private physician offices to a state-level quit line is feasible, can be accomplished at low cost with minimal use of resources, and may be cost effective. Regional, state, and local tobacco quit lines should consider a physician office “quit-line connection” as a practical approach to increase utilization.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
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