1. Development of a Pharmacist-Led Opt-Out Cessation Treatment Protocol for Combustible Tobacco Smoking Within Inpatient Settings
- Author
-
Danielle E. McCarthy, Jessica Bugg, Daniel Shirley, Philip J. Trapskin, Ann Sheehy, Paul D. Creswell, Adam J. Hood, Michael C. Fiore, Krista L. McElray, Mark Zehner, Amy D. Skora, Candace Bishop, Anne E. Rose, Brian S. Williams, Robert Adsit, Timothy B. Baker, and Emily Iglar
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Smoke ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Treatment protocol ,business.industry ,health care facilities, manpower, and services ,medicine.medical_treatment ,education ,010102 general mathematics ,Pharmacist ,Original Articles ,Pharmacy ,01 natural sciences ,Opt-out ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,health services administration ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,Smoking cessation ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,business ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Background: Although people who smoke cigarettes are overrepresented among hospital inpatients, few are connected with smoking cessation treatment during their hospitalization. Training, accountability for medication use, and monitoring of all patients position pharmacists well to deliver cessation interventions to all hospitalized patients who smoke. Methods: A large Midwestern University hospital implemented a pharmacist-led smoking cessation intervention. A delegation protocol for hospital pharmacy inpatients who smoked cigarettes gave hospital pharmacists the authority to order nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) during hospitalization and upon discharge, and for referral to the Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line (WTQL) at discharge. Eligible patients received the smoking cessation intervention unless they actively refused (ie, “opt-out”). The program was pilot tested in phases, with pharmacist feedback between phases, and then implemented hospital-wide. Interviews, surveys, and informal mechanisms identified ways to improve implementation and workflows. Results: Feedback from pharmacists led to changes that improved workflow, training and patient education materials, and enhanced adoption and reach. Refining implementation strategies across pilot phases increased the percentage of eligible smokers offered pharmacist-delivered cessation support from 37% to 76%, prescribed NRT from 2% to 44%, and referred to the WTQL from 3% to 32%. Conclusion: Hospitalizations provide an ideal opportunity for patients to make a tobacco quit attempt, and pharmacists can capitalize on this opportunity by integrating smoking cessation treatment into existing inpatient medication reconciliation workflows. Pharmacist-led implementation strategies developed in this study may be applicable in other inpatient settings.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF