Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco
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U. S. Public Health Service (USPHS) clinical guidelines for tobacco treatment recommend that providers routinely counsel smokers using a five-step algorithm (5A's): ask about tobacco use, advise smokers to quit, assess interest in quitting, assist with treatment, and arrange follow-up. ⋯ Satisfaction with overall health care increased as counseling intensity increased. Patient reports of smoking cessation interventions delivered during primary care practice are associated with greater patient satisfaction with their health care, even among smokers not ready to quit. Providers can follow USPHS guidelines with smokers without fear of alienating those not yet considering quitting.
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Comparative Study
Media advocacy and newspaper coverage of tobacco issues: a comparative analysis of 1 year's print news in the United States and Australia.
Tobacco control advocates now recognize the value of influencing news coverage of tobacco; news coverage influences attitudes and behavior as well as policy progression. It is, however, difficult to assess the progress of such efforts within a single national and temporal context. Our data represent the first systematic international comparison of press coverage of tobacco issues. ⋯ The substantive focus of coverage, however, differed, as did the expression of hostile opinion toward tobacco control efforts (United States, 4%; Australia, 7.1%). Although secondhand smoke and education, cessation, and prevention efforts were covered widely in both settings, these topics dominated coverage in Australia (29.2%) more than in the United States (17.6%), where a more diffuse set of tobacco topics gained relative prominence. The difference in policy conditions seems to offer contrasting opportunities for advocates in the two countries to use newspapers to promote helpful tobacco control messages for both behavior and policy change.
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This study is the first to characterize tobacco-related content in pharmacy school curricula in the United States. A national survey mailed to 83 U. S. schools of pharmacy assessed the extent to which tobacco is addressed in required coursework, educational methods of instruction, perceived importance of addressing tobacco in the doctor of pharmacy degree program, perceived adequacy of current levels of tobacco education in curricula, and perceived barriers to enhancing the tobacco-related content. ⋯ Key barriers to enhancing tobacco training are lack of curriculum time and lack of clinical clerkship sites focusing on tobacco interventions. Pharmacy faculty members perceive tobacco cessation training to be important, yet a mismatch exists between the perceived importance and the perceived adequacy of current levels of training in pharmacy school curricula. The results of this study will serve as a baseline measure against which future, parallel assessments will be compared as faculty at schools of pharmacy across the United States work together toward enhancing the tobacco cessation training of student pharmacists.
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Tobacco cessation knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of dentists participating in a large national managed care dental plan were assessed using a mailed survey. The survey was administered to dentists recruited to participate in an evaluation of a CD-ROM and supportive electronic detailing to promote increased tobacco cessation activities. General dentists who met specific technological criteria, had an active E-mail account, and at least 200 adult patients were eligible to participate in this study. ⋯ Although self-reported lack of knowledge was high, 71% of respondents indicated that their lack of knowledge was either not a barrier or a slight barrier to incorporating tobacco cessation into their practices. The survey revealed that dentists do not routinely incorporate tobacco cessation into their practices. Newer information-transfer technologies may serve as vehicles for increased smoking cessation activities by dentists.