Premium
Printed quit‐pack sent to surgical patients at time of waiting list placement improved perioperative quitting
Author(s) -
Webb Ashley R.,
Robertson Nicola,
Sparrow Maryanne,
Borland Ron,
Leong Samuel
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
anz journal of surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.426
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1445-2197
pISSN - 1445-1433
DOI - 10.1111/ans.12519
Subject(s) - medicine , quitline , smoking cessation , perioperative , abstinence , referral , intervention (counseling) , confidence interval , physical therapy , family medicine , emergency medicine , surgery , nursing , psychiatry , pathology
Background This study aimed to measure the effects of sending a smoking cessation ‘quit‐pack’ to all patients placed on the elective surgical waiting list. Method Questionnaire‐based study before intervention (mid‐2011, 177 patients) and after (2012/13, 170 patients) conducted on day of surgery. All were identified as adult smokers at time of waiting list placement at an outer metropolitan M elbourne public hospital. The intervention was a quit‐pack consisting of educational brochure containing cessation advice and focused on perioperative risks of smoking, together with Q uitline referral form and reply‐paid envelope. The primary outcome measure was proportion of smokers who quit on waiting list for ≥1 month before surgery, considered a clinically meaningful duration to reduce surgical complications. Results An 8.6% improvement in waiting list smokers achieving the target ≥1 month abstinence at day of surgery ( P = 0.03). The number needed to treat of 12 (95% confidence interval 6–240) meant 12 smokers receiving intervention would create one additional episode of clinically meaningful quitting on wait list. Conclusion Smoking cessation outcomes before elective surgery are significantly improved by systematic application of a printed intervention delivered at time of wait list placement that encourages and supports perioperative quitting.