帮助吸烟者戒烟:了解利用戒烟服务的障碍。

Sarah E. Gollust, S. Schroeder, K. Warner
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引用次数: 88

摘要

背景:为吸烟者提供戒烟咨询并向他们提供药物戒烟辅助是临床医生可以为患者提供的最有益和最具成本效益的干预措施之一。然而,并不是所有的医疗计划都涵盖戒烟的帮助,也不是所有的临床医生都提供戒烟的帮助。对利益攸关方的观点和利益的分析可以确定更广泛地提供戒烟服务的障碍,并为促进戒烟的公共政策议程提出战略建议。方法回顾文献并与利益相关者代表进行讨论。所有利益相关者——健康计划、雇主、临床医生、吸烟者和政府——在开展更广泛的戒烟活动时都面临障碍。这些问题包括健康计划认为包括咨询和药物治疗将增加成本,而不会产生相应的卫生保健节省,以及临床医生对咨询感到措手不及和得不到补偿。与其他针对行为的预防措施一样,旨在戒烟的努力在保健干预措施中处于边缘地位。州政府可以通过增加医疗补助的覆盖范围和扩大州雇员的覆盖范围来帮助纠正这种状况。联邦政府可以促进采用政府戒烟小组委员会建议的六项举措:建立全国戒烟热线,开展媒体宣传活动以鼓励戒烟,将戒烟福利纳入所有联邦资助的保险计划,建立研究基础设施以提高戒烟率,制定临床医生培训议程,并通过每包2美元的新卷烟消费税建立基金以增加戒烟活动。联邦政府和州政府都可以通过采取诸如提高卷烟税和禁止在工作场所和公共场所吸烟的法律等政策来促进戒烟。结论公共政策应在戒烟方面承担更大的社会责任,包括在州和联邦层面更积极的领导,以及通过倡导、公共卫生和临床医生组织。
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Helping smokers quit: understanding the barriers to utilization of smoking cessation services.
CONTEXT Counseling smokers to quit smoking and providing them with pharmaceutical cessation aides are among the most beneficial and cost-effective interventions that clinicians can offer patients. Yet assistance with quitting is not universally covered by health plans or offered by all clinicians. Analysis of stakeholders' perspectives and interests can identify the barriers to more widespread provision of cessation services and suggest strategies for the public policy agenda to advance smoking cessation. METHODS Review of literature and discussions with representatives of stakeholders. FINDINGS All stakeholders-health plans, employers, clinicians, smokers, and the government-face barriers to broader smoking cessation activities. These range from health plans' perceiving that covering counseling and pharmacotherapy will increase costs without producing commensurate health care savings, to clinicians' feeling unprepared and uncompensated for counseling. Like other preventive measures aimed at behavior, efforts directed at smoking cessation have marginal status among health care interventions. State governments can help correct this status by increasing Medicaid coverage of treatment and expanding coverage for state employees. The federal government can promote the adoption of six initiatives recommended by a government subcommittee on cessation: set up a national quit line, develop a media campaign to encourage cessation, include cessation benefits in all federally funded insurance plans, create a research infrastructure to improve cessation rates, develop a clinician training agenda, and create a fund to increase cessation activities through a new $2 per pack cigarette excise tax. Both the federal and state governments can increase cessation by adopting policies such as the higher cigarette tax and laws prohibiting smoking in workplaces and public places. CONCLUSIONS Public policy efforts should assume greater social responsibility for smoking cessation, including more aggressive leadership at the state and federal levels, as well as through advocacy, public health, and clinician organizations.
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