8 results on '"Richter, Kimber P."'
Search Results
2. Critical steps in the path to using cessation pharmacotherapy following hospital-initiated tobacco treatment
- Author
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Liebmann, Edward P., Scheuermann, Taneisha S., Faseru, Babalola, and Richter, Kimber P.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Functional brain activation changes associated with practice in delaying smoking among moderate to heavy smokers: study protocol and rationale of a randomized trial (COPE)
- Author
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Fox, Andrew T., Catley, Delwyn, Richter, Kimber P., Ellerbeck, Edward F., Brucks, Morgan G., Papa, Vlad B., and Martin, Laura E.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Changing the default for tobacco-cessation treatment in an inpatient setting: study protocol of a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Faseru, Babalola, Ellerbeck, Edward F., Catley, Delwyn, Gajewski, Byron J., Scheuermann, Taneisha S., Shireman, Theresa I., Mussulman, Laura M., Nazir, Niaman, Bush, Terry, and Richter, Kimber P.
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SMOKING cessation ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TERTIARY care ,DRUG therapy ,HEALTH counseling - Abstract
Background: Most health care providers do not treat tobacco dependence routinely. This may in part be due to the treatment "default." Current treatment guidelines recommend that providers (1) ask patients if they are willing to quit and (2) provide cessation-focused medications and counseling only to smokers who state that they are willing to quit. The default is that patients have to "opt in" to receive cessation assistance: providers ask smokers if they are willing to quit, and only offer medications and cessation support to those who say "yes." This drastically limits the reach of cessation services because, at any given encounter, only one in three smokers say that they are ready to quit. The objective of this study is to determine the impact of providing all smokers with tobacco-cessation treatment unless they refuse it (OPT OUT) versus current practice-screening for readiness and only offering treatment to smokers who say they are ready to quit (OPT IN).Methods: This individually randomized clinical trial is conducted in a tertiary-care hospital. We will conduct the trial among up to 1000 randomly selected hospitalized smokers to determine the population impact of changing the treatment default, identify mediators of outcome, and determine the cost-effectiveness of this new, highly proactive approach. This is a population-based study that targets an endpoint of vital interest; applies minimal eligibility criteria to broaden generalizability; and utilizes hospital staff for interventions to ensure long-term sustainability. The study employs delayed consent and an innovative Bayesian adaptive design to evaluate a major shift in our approach to care. If effective, this change would expand the reach of tobacco-cessation treatment from 30% to 100% of smokers.Discussion: Regardless of outcome, the trial will provide a model of how to alter and evaluate the impact of health care defaults. If OPT OUT proves to be more effective, it will expand the population eligible for cessation treatment by over 300%. It will also simplify the tobacco-cessation treatment algorithm, and relieve busy health care providers of the burden of evaluating readiness to quit.Trial Registration: Clinical Trials Registration, ID: NCT02721082 . Registered on 22 March 2016. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The index of tobacco treatment quality: development of a tool to assess evidence-based treatment in a national sample of drug treatment facilities.
- Author
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Cupertino, A. Paula, Hunt, Jamie J., Gajewski, Byron J., Yu Jiang, Marquis, Janet, Friedmann, Peter D., Engelman, Kimberly K., and Richter, Kimber P.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse treatment facilities ,DRUG abuse treatment ,ANTI-smoking campaigns ,SMOKING cessation ,QUALITATIVE research ,SMOKING ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: Quitting smoking improves health and drug use outcomes among people in treatment for substance abuse. The twofold purpose of this study is to describe tobacco treatment provision across a representative sample of U.S. facilities and to use these data to develop the brief Index of Tobacco Treatment Quality (ITTQ). Methods: We constructed survey items based on current tobacco treatment guidelines, existing surveys, expert input, and qualitative research. We administered the survey to a stratified sample of 405 facility administrators selected from all 3,800 U.S. adult outpatient facilities listed in the SAMHSA Inventory of Substance Abuse Treatment Services. We constructed the ITTQ with a subset of 7 items that have the strongest clinical evidence for smoking cessation. Results: Most facilities (87.7%) reported that a majority of their clients were asked if they smoke cigarettes. Nearly half of facilities (48.6%) reported that a majority of their smoking clients were advised to quit. Fewer (23.3%) reported that a majority of their smoking clients received tobacco treatment counseling and even fewer facilities (18.3%) reported a majority of their smoking clients were advised to use quit smoking medications. The median facility ITTQ score was 2.57 (on a scale of 1-5) and the ITTQ displayed good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha=.844). Moreover, the ITTQ had substantial test-retest reliability (.856), and ordinal confirmatory factor analysis found that our one-factor model for ITTQ fit the data very well with a CFI of 0.997 and an RMSEA of 0.042. Conclusions: The ITTQ is a brief and reliable tool for measuring tobacco treatment quality in substance abuse treatment facilities. Given the clear-cut room for improvement in tobacco treatment, the ITTQ could be an important tool for quality improvement by identifying service levels, facilitating goal setting, and measuring change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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6. Screening and brief intervention for alcohol and other drug use in primary care: associations between organizational climate and practice.
- Author
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Cruvinel, Erica, Richter, Kimber P., Rocha Bastos, Ronaldo, and Mota Ronzani, Telmo
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DRUG utilization ,PRIMARY care ,INSTITUTIONAL environment ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICAL screening ,TOBACCO use - Abstract
Background: Numerous studies have demonstrated that positive organizational climates contribute to better work performance. Screening and brief intervention (SBI) for alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use has the potential to reach a broad population of hazardous drug users but has not yet been widely adopted in Brazil's health care system. We surveyed 149 primary health care professionals in 30 clinics in Brazil who were trained to conduct SBI among their patients. We prospectively measured how often they delivered SBI to evaluate the association between organizational climate and adoption/performance of SBI. Methods: Organizational climate was measured by the 2009 Organizational Climate Scale for Health Organizations, a scale validated in Brazil that assesses leadership, professional development, team spirit, relationship with the community, safety, strategy, and remuneration. Performance of SBI was measured prospectively by weekly assessments during the three months following training. We also assessed self-reported SBI and self-efficacy for performing SBI at three months post-training. We used inferential statistics to depict and test for the significance of associations. Results: Teams with better organizational climates implemented SBI more frequently. Organizational climate factors most closely associated with SBI implementation included professional development and relationship with the community. The dimensions of leadership and remuneration were also significantly associated with SBI. Conclusions: Organizational climate may influence implementation of SBI and ultimately may affect the ability of organizations to identify and address drug use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Using "warm handoffs" to link hospitalized smokers with tobacco treatment after discharge: study protocol of a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Richter, Kimber P, Faseru, Babalola, Mussulman, Laura M, Ellerbeck, Edward F, Shireman, Theresa i, Hunt, Jamie J, Carlini, Beatriz H, Preacher, Kristopher J, Ayars, Candace L, and Cook, David J
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SMOKING cessation , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *COST effectiveness , *HOSPITAL administration , *TOBACCO , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Post-discharge support is a key component of effective treatment for hospitalized smokers, but few hospitals provide it. Many hospitals and care settings fax-refer smokers to quitlines for follow-up; however, less than half of fax-referred smokers are successfully contacted and enrolled in quitline services. "Warm handoff" is a novela pproach to care transitions in which health care providers directly link patients with substance abuse problems with specialists, using face-to-face or phone transfer. Warm handoff achieves very high rates of treatment enrollment for these vulnerable groups. Methods: The aim of this study-"EQUIP" (Enhancing Quitline Utilization among In-Patients)-is to determine the effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness, of warm handoff versus fax referral for linking hospitalized smokers with tobacco quitlines. This study employs a two-arm, individually randomized design. It is set in two large Kansas hospitals that have dedicated tobacco treatment interventionists on staff. At each site, smokers who wish to remain abstinent after discharge will be randomly assigned to groups. For patients in the fax group, staff will provide standard in-hospital intervention and will fax-refer patients to the state tobacco quitline for counseling post discharge.For patients in the warm handoff group, staff will provide brief in-hospital intervention and immediate warm handoff: staff will call the state quitline, notify them that a warm handoff inpatient from Kansas is on the line, then transfer the call to the patients' mobile or bedside hospital phone for quitline enrollment and an initial counseling session. Following the quitline session, hospital staff provides a brief check-back visit. Outcome measures will be assessed at 1, 6, and 12 months post enrollment. Costs are measured to support cost-effectiveness analyses. We hypothesize that warm handoff, compared to fax referral, will improve care transitions for tobacco treatment, enroll more participants in quitline services, and lead to higher quit rates. We also hypothesize that warm handoff will be more cost-effective from a societal perspective. Discussion: If successful, this project offers a low-cost solution for more efficiently linking millions of hospitalized smokers with effective outpatient treatment-smokers that might otherwise be lost in the transition to outpatient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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8. A rationale and model for addressing tobacco dependence in substance abuse treatment.
- Author
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Richter, Kimber P. and Arnsten, Julia H.
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NICOTINE addiction , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *CIGARETTES , *SMOKING , *TOBACCO use , *ALCOHOLISM , *SMOKING cessation - Abstract
Most persons in drug treatment smoke cigarettes. Until drug treatment facilities systematically treat their patients' tobacco use, millions will flow through the drug treatment system, overcome their primary drug of abuse, but die prematurely from tobacco-related illnesses. This paper reviews the literature on the health benefits of quitting smoking for drug treatment patients, whether smoking causes relapse to other drug or alcohol abuse, the treatment of tobacco dependence, and good and bad times for quitting smoking among drug treatment patients. It also presents a conceptual model and recommendations for treating tobacco in substance abuse treatment, and provides references to internet and paper-copy tools and information for treating tobacco dependence. At present, research on tobacco treatment in drug treatment is in its infancy. Although few drug treatment programs currently offer formal services, many more will likely begin to treat nicotine dependence as external forces and patient demand for these services increases. In the absence of clear guidelines and attention to quality of care, drug treatment programs may adopt smoking cessation services based on cost, convenience, or selection criteria other than efficacy. Because research in this field is relatively new, substance abuse treatment professionals should adhere to the standards of care for the general population, but be prepared to update their practices with emerging interventions that have proven to be effective for patients in drug treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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