Articles: tobacco-use-disorder.
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Using a checklist to establish patients' level of dependence and combining behavioral therapy with nicotine replacement products can help users to quit.
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The number of Americans who use tobacco has decreased in the twenty-first century, but electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) have increased the complexity of treating tobacco dependence. The experiences of 18 family medicine practices were explored and opportunities to improve ENDS cessation were co-created in this study. ⋯ This study highlights challenges and opportunities for incorporating ENDS cessation into family medicine. The opportunities outlined here provide a practical approach which is rooted in the experiences of family physicians and their clinical care teams working to improve how they address ENDS and based on peer reviewed literature and expert input. Improving how ENDS are addressed in family medicine will require more than clinical expertise. It will also require leadership skills and the ability to create process improvements.
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Preventive medicine · Jul 2021
Variations in Electronic Nicotine Delivery System (ENDS) device types and association with cigarette quit attempts.
This study examined electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) devices classified as disposable, non-refillable cartridge, refillable cartridge, refillable tank, and refillable mod systems and examined if cigarette quit attempts varied by device type among daily and non-daily ENDS users. Data from Wave 3 (2015-16) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study, a nationally representative study in the U. S. was used to explore ENDS device types among past 12 month adult cigarette and ENDS users (n = 4952). ⋯ The odds of attempting to quit smoking were higher among daily ENDS users who used non-refillable cartridge (AOR = 7.3, 95% CI: 1.5-34.9), refillable tank (AOR = 5.3, 95% CI: 1.5-19.3) or refillable mod systems (AOR = 5.9, 95% CI: 1.2-30.1) compared to those who used disposables adjusting for age group, gender, race, ethnicity, and nicotine dependence. The likelihood of quit attempt among non-daily ENDS users did not differ by device type. Better understanding of ENDS device types and their use in smoking cessation is needed to inform health interventions.
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Review
Smoking cessation: strategies and effects in primary and secondary cardiovascular prevention.
Although smoking is seen as a major health problem by most clinicians, few are able to provide evidence based smoking cessation interventions to their patients. Most individuals who smoke actually want to quit. Unfortunately, smoking is still seen as a vice or lifestyle choice, when it is actually a chronic disease which often starts in adolescence. ⋯ Although classically tobacco dependence was seen in relation to smoking, since the early 2000s, new nicotine delivery systems have appeared on the market, which despite being marketed as "healthy" alternatives, can often complicate smoking cessation efforts and act as gateway devices for new generations of smokers. In this article we review the results of several large systematic reviews and meta-analyses, which have shown that many cessation strategies are effective. We also offer practical tips on providing brief cessation advice and how pharmacotherapy can be prescribed and incorporated into clinical practice in both primary and secondary cardiovascular prevention.