Health education research
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Health education research · Oct 2003
Health care practitioners' motivation for tobacco-dependence counseling.
Smoking cessation counseling by practitioners occurs at low rates in spite of strong evidence that counseling increases quit rates and reduces patient mortality. In a preliminary study, 1060 New York State physicians completed a survey concerning use of the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) Guidelines, perceived autonomy and perceived competence for counseling, perceived autonomy support from insurers, and barriers to counseling. ⋯ The primary, longitudinal study of 220 health care practitioners who attended a smoking cessation workshop predicted change in the practitioners' perceived autonomy and perceived competence for counseling as a function of the degree to which they experienced the workshop instructor as autonomy-supportive. In turn, change in perceived autonomy predicted change in time spent counseling and change in use of the AHCPR guidelines.