Physician attitude and practice
pattern related to smoking cessation
Dr. Essam Elmoghazy
Health Hazards of smoking
• Tobacco is the leading preventable cause of death in
the world today. It currently leads to the death of one
in ten adults. The number of annual deaths is expected
to increase to 8 million by 2030.
• Smoking causes a wide range of health conditions and
fatal diseases, including cancer, respiratory disease and
heart disease.
• It is the most important risk factor for chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer.
• Exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke harms health
and worsens existing health problems, including
respiratory conditions. It causes diseases such as lung
cancer, coronary heart disease and cardiac death
Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking
Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking
Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking
Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking
Smoking burden
Globally
• The tobacco epidemic is one of the biggest public
health threats the world has ever faced, killing
around 6 million people a year. More than 5
million of those deaths are the result of direct
tobacco use while more than 600 000 are the
result of non-smokers being exposed to second-
hand smoke.
Nearly 80% of the more than 1 billion smokers
worldwide live in low- and middle-income
countries, where the burden of tobacco-related
illness and death is heaviest.
Smoking burden
Egypt:
• It is estimated that approximately 20% of the
population uses tobacco products daily.
• Cigarettes are the most common form of
tobacco consumption in Egypt, with an
estimated 20 billion cigarettes smoked
annually in the country.
• After cigarettes shisha are the most common
form of tobacco consumption.
Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking
Smoking cessation
• Smoking cessation significantly reduces morbidity
and mortality.
• Brief tobacco cessation counseling interventions,
including screening, brief counseling (3 min or
less), and/or pharmacotherapy; have proven to
increase tobacco abstinence rates.
• It’s recommended that clinicians screen all adults
for tobacco use and provide tobacco cessation
interventions for those who use tobacco products
Golden standards for initiating
smoking cessation is the 5 As
Asking about tobacco use,
Advising tobacco users to quit,
Assessing readiness to make a quit attempt,
Assisting with the quit attempt,
Arranging follow-up care.
Cessation Options
• Counseling. . Intensive counseling is associated
with a 22% rate of quitting, and even minimal
(<3 minutes) counseling is associated with a
13% quit rate.
Pharmacotherapy. Two general classes of drugs
are approved by FDA for cessation:
1-Nicotine replacements products (NRTs)
2-Psychotropic drugs.
25 November 2015 Moustapha Mounib 12
Smoking Cessation Interventions
There are 5 basic ways to help smoking quit: increase the
price of a pack of cigarettes by increasing taxes; pass
clean indoor air legislation that bans smoking in public
places; create and disseminate effective counter-
marketing messages about smoking-in the media or as
graphic package displays; ban tobacco advertising and
promotion; and provide cessation aids.
25 November 2015 Moustapha Mounib 13
Role of physicians
• While guidelines recommend all doctors to ask their patients
about their smoking habits and, in case they smoke, offer
cessation advice, limited data are available about doctors'
attitudes toward these recommendations
• Physicians can contribute largely to efforts to reduce smoking
and remain one of the most important sources of information
on health risks for patients and their families.
• Many smokers will visit a physician each year , and physician
advice and encouragement have been shown to increase the
number of patients who will attempt and succeed in quitting
smoking.
• Recent studies suggest that physician interventions have the
potential to increase abstinence rates to 30% from only 7%
among adult smokers attempting to quit on their own
Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking
Norwegian hospital doctors
• 23% of the doctors found it too time consuming to ask if
the patient smoked, and approximately 35% found it too
time consuming to inform or offer help on smoking
cessation.
• About 25% of the doctors felt that they did not possess
enough knowledge to help the patient to stop smoking, and
65% of the doctors preferred to refer to a specialist for this.
• 28% of the doctors did not see it as their task to help the
patient to stop smoking, while 32% did not think it is worth
the effort to offer the patient help to stop smoking.
• In conclusion, about one-quarter to one-third of Norwegian
hospital doctors seem to disagree with current guidelines
that all doctors should address their patients' smoking
habits
University of Washington School of Medicine
• A sample of 8229 smokers aged 18 years and
older who made at least one visit to a physician in
the past year.
CONCLUSIONS:
• Physicians continue to miss opportunities to
provide smoking cessation advice, a potentially
lifesaving intervention. Given the adverse health
consequences of tobacco use and the
demonstrated benefit of advice to quit,
physicians need to improve their cessation
counseling efforts.
A study by the Cancer Control Science Program,
National Cancer Institute, Maryland
The potential public health impact of physician
intervention with smoking patients is enormous.
Even with very modest expectations of cessation
rates, 100,000 physicians using effective
intervention can produce over 3 million new ex-
smokers in the United States each year. In
conjunction with other community-based
tobacco control efforts, this physician-lead effort
will result in a marked reduction in the morbidity
and mortality caused by smoking and, thus,
control of "the most important public health
issue of our time."
KAP Family Physicians Regarding Smoking
Cessation Counseling in Suez Canal University
• The present study showed limited knowledge
and practice of family physicians regarding
smoking cessation counseling.
• Training and lack of time were among the
barriers that call for organization support.
• Further, interventional researches are needed
to improve and re-evaluate quality of smoking
cessation counseling using direct observation
of practice.
Conclusions
Decreasing tobacco use will require greater activity on the part
of the physicians in cessation activities. This will require
increased familiarity with available resources as well as
sustained efforts to improve these resources. Specifically,
several areas for improvement exist, including:
Increase the availability and use of tobacco control tools
• Increase the number of smoking cessation services
• Promote physician familiarity with tobacco control
resources as well as how patients can access these services
• Provide physicians with additional information on quitlines
and web based resources Increase physician assistance to
patients who smoke to reduce their use of tobacco
Conclusions
Increase physician assistance to patients who
smoke to reduce their use of tobacco
• Encourage medical practices to require
documentation of activities undertaken to help
patients quit smoking, e.g., documentation of
treatment strategies discussed with patients
• Improve physician-patient communication
around tobacco use
Improve coverage for tobacco control treatment,
services, and physician time
• Expand insurance coverage to include additional
cessation treatment and support services
Conclusions
Increase physician knowledge of tobacco control
interventions
• Improve effectiveness of medical school curricula on
tobacco control as part of assisting patients with
behavioral changes
• Increase the availability of CME related to smoking
cessation and behavioral change
Support investment in tobacco control
• Improve linkages between physician associations and
other tobacco control stakeholders to promote
collaboration in efforts in to promote the health of
citizens in communities
Thank you

More Related Content

PDF
Clinical review supporting smoking cessationqqqqqqq11111
PPTX
Smoking scernario among indian youth
PPTX
PPT
Towards a whole system strategy on prevention
PPTX
Evaluation of the Breathlessness Pilots (OPM)
PPTX
Leicester, Leicestershire, Rutland Breathlessness Pathway (University Hospita...
PPTX
Innovations conference 2014 ingrid plueckhahn cancer treatment and care inn...
PPTX
non smoking policies hcs 340
Clinical review supporting smoking cessationqqqqqqq11111
Smoking scernario among indian youth
Towards a whole system strategy on prevention
Evaluation of the Breathlessness Pilots (OPM)
Leicester, Leicestershire, Rutland Breathlessness Pathway (University Hospita...
Innovations conference 2014 ingrid plueckhahn cancer treatment and care inn...
non smoking policies hcs 340

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Breathlessness and parity of esteem
PPT
Mental health shared care model for metropolitan adelaide
PPT
17. chris doran ace alcohol vine presentation
PPTX
Public Health breathlessness and lung cancer update
PPTX
Symptom led diagnostic services for breathlessness
PPTX
Vince mak - respiratory and mental health
PDF
Health Navigator lunch and learn – 15 January 2016
PDF
Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice
PPTX
Evidence based practice guidelines and findings for brief interventions
PPTX
IMPRESS development of diagnostic algorithms
PPTX
Introduction to breathlessness symposium
PPTX
Detecting breathlessness and structured assessment in primary care
PDF
TYA and Adult Late Effects Service at UCLH
PDF
Transition: paediatric to TYA to adult follow up services - a nursing perspe...
PPTX
Symptom led services for breathlessness - real life examples
PDF
Shoveling Up II: The Impact of Substance Abuse on Federal, State and Local Bu...
PDF
CDC - Fact Sheet - Quitting Smoking
PPTX
Ncd ppt
PPTX
Over 50% of patients visiting docs
PDF
De Wilde Tency Steckel Temmerman Boudrez Maes
Breathlessness and parity of esteem
Mental health shared care model for metropolitan adelaide
17. chris doran ace alcohol vine presentation
Public Health breathlessness and lung cancer update
Symptom led diagnostic services for breathlessness
Vince mak - respiratory and mental health
Health Navigator lunch and learn – 15 January 2016
Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice
Evidence based practice guidelines and findings for brief interventions
IMPRESS development of diagnostic algorithms
Introduction to breathlessness symposium
Detecting breathlessness and structured assessment in primary care
TYA and Adult Late Effects Service at UCLH
Transition: paediatric to TYA to adult follow up services - a nursing perspe...
Symptom led services for breathlessness - real life examples
Shoveling Up II: The Impact of Substance Abuse on Federal, State and Local Bu...
CDC - Fact Sheet - Quitting Smoking
Ncd ppt
Over 50% of patients visiting docs
De Wilde Tency Steckel Temmerman Boudrez Maes
Ad

Similar to Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking (20)

PPT
Smoking cessation complete guideline .ppt
PDF
Improving smoking cessation approaches at the individual level
PDF
Improving smoking cessation approaches at the individual level
PDF
Tob control 2012-aveyard-252-7
PPTX
Role of Family Physicians in Smoking Cessation
PPTX
Tobacco screening by healthcare professionals
PPTX
Tobacco screening by healthcare professionals
PPT
Cancer Heart Disease.ppt
PDF
SMOKING CESSATION _ CODP 8
 
PPTX
Smoking cessation
PPTX
Presentation on tobacco
PPTX
SMOKING CESSATION.pptx
PDF
Developing and Implementing a Smoking Cessation Intervention in Primary Care...
DOCX
Management Of Stable Copd
PPT
Smoking Cessation
PPTX
Tobacco ceassation
PPT
Smoking Cessation Tutorial
PDF
My Research Report Study About the prevalence of smoking in Health Care Provi...
PPTX
Steps of Smoking Cessation Badr Bin Himd.pptx
PDF
COPD Lecture 8 Tobacoo cessation
Smoking cessation complete guideline .ppt
Improving smoking cessation approaches at the individual level
Improving smoking cessation approaches at the individual level
Tob control 2012-aveyard-252-7
Role of Family Physicians in Smoking Cessation
Tobacco screening by healthcare professionals
Tobacco screening by healthcare professionals
Cancer Heart Disease.ppt
SMOKING CESSATION _ CODP 8
 
Smoking cessation
Presentation on tobacco
SMOKING CESSATION.pptx
Developing and Implementing a Smoking Cessation Intervention in Primary Care...
Management Of Stable Copd
Smoking Cessation
Tobacco ceassation
Smoking Cessation Tutorial
My Research Report Study About the prevalence of smoking in Health Care Provi...
Steps of Smoking Cessation Badr Bin Himd.pptx
COPD Lecture 8 Tobacoo cessation
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
Assessment of fetal wellbeing for nurses.
PPT
nephrology MRCP - Member of Royal College of Physicians ppt
PPT
neurology Member of Royal College of Physicians (MRCP).ppt
PDF
OSCE Series Set 1 ( Questions & Answers ).pdf
PPT
Infections Member of Royal College of Physicians.ppt
PPT
Opthalmology presentation MRCP preparation.ppt
PDF
OSCE SERIES - Set 7 ( Questions & Answers ).pdf
PDF
B C German Homoeopathy Medicineby Dr Brij Mohan Prasad
PPTX
thio and propofol mechanism and uses.pptx
PPTX
SHOCK- lectures on types of shock ,and complications w
PPT
Dermatology for member of royalcollege.ppt
PPTX
NRP and care of Newborn.pptx- APPT presentation about neonatal resuscitation ...
PDF
Nursing manual for conscious sedation.pdf
PPTX
Hearthhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
PPTX
Primary Tuberculous Infection/Disease by Dr Vahyala Zira Kumanda
PPTX
Post Op complications in general surgery
PPTX
Wheat allergies and Disease in gastroenterology
PPTX
HYPERSENSITIVITY REACTIONS - Pathophysiology Notes for Second Year Pharm D St...
PPTX
Impression Materials in dental materials.pptx
PDF
Lecture on Anesthesia for ENT surgery 2025pptx.pdf
Assessment of fetal wellbeing for nurses.
nephrology MRCP - Member of Royal College of Physicians ppt
neurology Member of Royal College of Physicians (MRCP).ppt
OSCE Series Set 1 ( Questions & Answers ).pdf
Infections Member of Royal College of Physicians.ppt
Opthalmology presentation MRCP preparation.ppt
OSCE SERIES - Set 7 ( Questions & Answers ).pdf
B C German Homoeopathy Medicineby Dr Brij Mohan Prasad
thio and propofol mechanism and uses.pptx
SHOCK- lectures on types of shock ,and complications w
Dermatology for member of royalcollege.ppt
NRP and care of Newborn.pptx- APPT presentation about neonatal resuscitation ...
Nursing manual for conscious sedation.pdf
Hearthhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Primary Tuberculous Infection/Disease by Dr Vahyala Zira Kumanda
Post Op complications in general surgery
Wheat allergies and Disease in gastroenterology
HYPERSENSITIVITY REACTIONS - Pathophysiology Notes for Second Year Pharm D St...
Impression Materials in dental materials.pptx
Lecture on Anesthesia for ENT surgery 2025pptx.pdf

Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking

  • 1. Physician attitude and practice pattern related to smoking cessation Dr. Essam Elmoghazy
  • 2. Health Hazards of smoking • Tobacco is the leading preventable cause of death in the world today. It currently leads to the death of one in ten adults. The number of annual deaths is expected to increase to 8 million by 2030. • Smoking causes a wide range of health conditions and fatal diseases, including cancer, respiratory disease and heart disease. • It is the most important risk factor for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. • Exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke harms health and worsens existing health problems, including respiratory conditions. It causes diseases such as lung cancer, coronary heart disease and cardiac death
  • 7. Smoking burden Globally • The tobacco epidemic is one of the biggest public health threats the world has ever faced, killing around 6 million people a year. More than 5 million of those deaths are the result of direct tobacco use while more than 600 000 are the result of non-smokers being exposed to second- hand smoke. Nearly 80% of the more than 1 billion smokers worldwide live in low- and middle-income countries, where the burden of tobacco-related illness and death is heaviest.
  • 8. Smoking burden Egypt: • It is estimated that approximately 20% of the population uses tobacco products daily. • Cigarettes are the most common form of tobacco consumption in Egypt, with an estimated 20 billion cigarettes smoked annually in the country. • After cigarettes shisha are the most common form of tobacco consumption.
  • 10. Smoking cessation • Smoking cessation significantly reduces morbidity and mortality. • Brief tobacco cessation counseling interventions, including screening, brief counseling (3 min or less), and/or pharmacotherapy; have proven to increase tobacco abstinence rates. • It’s recommended that clinicians screen all adults for tobacco use and provide tobacco cessation interventions for those who use tobacco products
  • 11. Golden standards for initiating smoking cessation is the 5 As Asking about tobacco use, Advising tobacco users to quit, Assessing readiness to make a quit attempt, Assisting with the quit attempt, Arranging follow-up care.
  • 12. Cessation Options • Counseling. . Intensive counseling is associated with a 22% rate of quitting, and even minimal (<3 minutes) counseling is associated with a 13% quit rate. Pharmacotherapy. Two general classes of drugs are approved by FDA for cessation: 1-Nicotine replacements products (NRTs) 2-Psychotropic drugs. 25 November 2015 Moustapha Mounib 12
  • 13. Smoking Cessation Interventions There are 5 basic ways to help smoking quit: increase the price of a pack of cigarettes by increasing taxes; pass clean indoor air legislation that bans smoking in public places; create and disseminate effective counter- marketing messages about smoking-in the media or as graphic package displays; ban tobacco advertising and promotion; and provide cessation aids. 25 November 2015 Moustapha Mounib 13
  • 14. Role of physicians • While guidelines recommend all doctors to ask their patients about their smoking habits and, in case they smoke, offer cessation advice, limited data are available about doctors' attitudes toward these recommendations • Physicians can contribute largely to efforts to reduce smoking and remain one of the most important sources of information on health risks for patients and their families. • Many smokers will visit a physician each year , and physician advice and encouragement have been shown to increase the number of patients who will attempt and succeed in quitting smoking. • Recent studies suggest that physician interventions have the potential to increase abstinence rates to 30% from only 7% among adult smokers attempting to quit on their own
  • 16. Norwegian hospital doctors • 23% of the doctors found it too time consuming to ask if the patient smoked, and approximately 35% found it too time consuming to inform or offer help on smoking cessation. • About 25% of the doctors felt that they did not possess enough knowledge to help the patient to stop smoking, and 65% of the doctors preferred to refer to a specialist for this. • 28% of the doctors did not see it as their task to help the patient to stop smoking, while 32% did not think it is worth the effort to offer the patient help to stop smoking. • In conclusion, about one-quarter to one-third of Norwegian hospital doctors seem to disagree with current guidelines that all doctors should address their patients' smoking habits
  • 17. University of Washington School of Medicine • A sample of 8229 smokers aged 18 years and older who made at least one visit to a physician in the past year. CONCLUSIONS: • Physicians continue to miss opportunities to provide smoking cessation advice, a potentially lifesaving intervention. Given the adverse health consequences of tobacco use and the demonstrated benefit of advice to quit, physicians need to improve their cessation counseling efforts.
  • 18. A study by the Cancer Control Science Program, National Cancer Institute, Maryland The potential public health impact of physician intervention with smoking patients is enormous. Even with very modest expectations of cessation rates, 100,000 physicians using effective intervention can produce over 3 million new ex- smokers in the United States each year. In conjunction with other community-based tobacco control efforts, this physician-lead effort will result in a marked reduction in the morbidity and mortality caused by smoking and, thus, control of "the most important public health issue of our time."
  • 19. KAP Family Physicians Regarding Smoking Cessation Counseling in Suez Canal University • The present study showed limited knowledge and practice of family physicians regarding smoking cessation counseling. • Training and lack of time were among the barriers that call for organization support. • Further, interventional researches are needed to improve and re-evaluate quality of smoking cessation counseling using direct observation of practice.
  • 20. Conclusions Decreasing tobacco use will require greater activity on the part of the physicians in cessation activities. This will require increased familiarity with available resources as well as sustained efforts to improve these resources. Specifically, several areas for improvement exist, including: Increase the availability and use of tobacco control tools • Increase the number of smoking cessation services • Promote physician familiarity with tobacco control resources as well as how patients can access these services • Provide physicians with additional information on quitlines and web based resources Increase physician assistance to patients who smoke to reduce their use of tobacco
  • 21. Conclusions Increase physician assistance to patients who smoke to reduce their use of tobacco • Encourage medical practices to require documentation of activities undertaken to help patients quit smoking, e.g., documentation of treatment strategies discussed with patients • Improve physician-patient communication around tobacco use Improve coverage for tobacco control treatment, services, and physician time • Expand insurance coverage to include additional cessation treatment and support services
  • 22. Conclusions Increase physician knowledge of tobacco control interventions • Improve effectiveness of medical school curricula on tobacco control as part of assisting patients with behavioral changes • Increase the availability of CME related to smoking cessation and behavioral change Support investment in tobacco control • Improve linkages between physician associations and other tobacco control stakeholders to promote collaboration in efforts in to promote the health of citizens in communities