Motivation of trauma patients to stop smoking after admission to the emergency department

Abstract Every smoker should be offered smoking cessation treatment when they present for clinical care. The Readiness to Change-Smokers (RTC-S) questionnaire and the Heidelberg Smoking History (HSH) are brief questionnaires that divide patients into three stages. The purpose of this study was to pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Addictive behaviors Vol. 33; no. 7; pp. 906 - 918
Main Authors: Weiss-Gerlach, E, Franck, M, Neuner, B, Gentilello, L.M, Neumann, T, Tønnesen, H, Kolbeck, S, Cammann, H, Perka, C, MacGuill, M, Spies, C.D
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-07-2008
Elsevier Science Ltd
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Summary:Abstract Every smoker should be offered smoking cessation treatment when they present for clinical care. The Readiness to Change-Smokers (RTC-S) questionnaire and the Heidelberg Smoking History (HSH) are brief questionnaires that divide patients into three stages. The purpose of this study was to prospectively compare the performance of each questionnaire at identifying patients who will successfully quit smoking within one year of Emergency Department (ED) discharge. Out of 1292 injured ED patients nearly half ( n = 599, 46.4%) were identified as current smokers. Both questionnaires were given to all 599 subjects, and used to divide patients into three stages. At 12-months postdischarge 306 patients (51.1%) were contacted to determine smoking status. Patients were similarly classified by both tests in only 36% of cases. Concordance between tests was poor (kappa = 0.33). The RTC-S classified fewer patients as ready to quit (A = 13% vs. 22.2%). At 12 month follow-up, 55 patients (17.9%) had stopped smoking. The HSH was more successful to predict quitters. Multivariate logistic regression with respect to smoking cessation resulted in significant impact of HSH ( p = 0.024).
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ISSN:0306-4603
1873-6327
DOI:10.1016/j.addbeh.2008.02.005