Computer-Assisted Guidance for Dental Office Tobacco-Cessation Counseling: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Volume 44, Issue 3, March 2013, Pages 260–264
Background
Decreases in smoking
prevalence from recent decades have slowed, and national goals to reduce
tobacco use remain unmet. Healthcare providers, including those in
physician and dental teams, have access to evidence-based guidelines to
help patients quit smoking. Translation of those guidelines into
practice, however, remains low. Approaches that involve screening for
drug use, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) are a
promising, practical solution.
Purpose
This
study examined whether dentists and dental hygienists would assess
interest in quitting, deliver a brief tobacco intervention, and refer to
a tobacco quitline more frequently as reported by patients if given
computer-assisted guidance in an electronic patient record versus a
control group providing usual care.
Design
A
blocked, group-randomized trial was conducted from November 2010 to
April 2011. Randomization was conducted at the clinic level. Patients
nested within clinics represented the lowest-level unit of observation.
Setting/participants
Participants were patients in HealthPartners dental clinics.
Intervention
Intervention
clinics were given a computer-assisted tool that suggested scripts for
patient discussions. Usual care clinics provided care without the tool.
Main outcome measures
Primary
outcomes were post-appointment patient reports of the provider
assessing interest in quitting, delivering a brief intervention, and
referring them to a quitline.
Results
Patient
telephone surveys (72% response rate) indicated that providers assessed
interest in quitting (control 70% vs intervention 87%, p=0.0006); discussed specific strategies for quitting (control 26% vs intervention 47%, p=0.003); and referred the patient to a tobacco quitline (control 17% vs intervention 37%, p=0.007) more frequently with the support of a computer-assisted tool integrated into the electronic health record.
Conclusions
Clinical
decision support embedded in electronic health records can effectively
help providers deliver tobacco interventions. These results build on
evidence in medical settings supporting this approach to improve
provider-delivered tobacco cessation.
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