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Clinical Trial
. 2005 Jun;29(3):285-91.
doi: 10.1111/j.1467-842x.2005.tb00770.x.

A randomised controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of a nurse-provided intervention for hospitalised smokers

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Free article
Clinical Trial

A randomised controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of a nurse-provided intervention for hospitalised smokers

Amanda L Nagle et al. Aust N Z J Public Health. 2005 Jun.
Free article

Abstract

Objective: Does the provision of a nurse-based intervention lead to smoking cessation in hospital patients?

Methods: At tertiary teaching hospital in Newcastle, Australia, 4,779 eligible (aged 18-80, admitted for at least 24 hours, and able to provide informed consent) and consenting (73.4%) in-patients were recruited into a larger cross-sectional survey. 1,422 (29.7%) smokers (in the last 12 months) were randomly assigned to control (n = 711) or intervention group (n = 711). The brief nurse-delivered intervention incorporated: tailored information, assessment of withdrawal, offer of nicotine replacement therapy, booklets, and a discharge letter. Self-reported cessation at 12 months was validated with CO and salivary cotinine.

Results: There were no significant differences between groups in self-reported abstinence at three or 12 months post intervention, based on an intention to treat analysis. At three months, self-reported abstinence was 27.3% (I) and 27.5% (C); at 12 months was 18.5% (I) and 20.6% (C). There were no differences in validation of self-report between intervention and control groups at 12 months.

Conclusion: This brief nurse-provided in-patient intervention did not significantly increase the smoking cessation rates compared with the control group at either three or 12-month follow-up.

Implications: A systematic total quality improvement model of accountable outcome-focused treatment, incorporating assertive physician-led pharmacotherapy, routine assessment and recording of nicotine dependence (ICD 10 coding), in- and outpatient services and engagement from multidisciplinary teams of health professionals may be required to improve treatment modalities for this chronic addictive disorder.

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