Title: QuitLink: A Leveraging Solution to Tobacco Counseling
1QuitLink A Leveraging Solution to Tobacco
Counseling
- Virginia Commonwealth University
- Stephen F. Rothemich, MD, MS
- Steven H. Woolf, MD, MPH
- Robert E. Johnson, PhD
- Kelly J. Devers, PhD
- Sharon K. Flores, MS
- Amy E. Burgett, RN
- American Cancer Society Quitline
- Pamela Villars, MEd, LPC
- Vance Rabius, PhD
- Group Health Cooperative
- Tim McAfee, MD, MPH
- Funded by AHRQ (1 R21 HS014854)
2Background
- Few practices can routinely provide more than
simple cessation advice - Numerous barriers to intensive counseling
- Lack of office support systems to conduct
cessation counseling amidst the competing demands
of busy primary care visits - Quit lines deliver intensive counseling
3Primary Objective
- To test whether patient-reported delivery of
intensive cessation counseling in practices is
enhanced by QuitLinks 3-component approach to
integrating quit lines into primary care practice
1
4QuitLink Components
- An expanded vital sign intervention (Ask, Advise,
Assess done by staff) - Capacity to provide fax referral of
preparation-stage patients for proactive
telephone counseling (American Cancer Society
Quitline) - Feedback to the provider team, including
individual and aggregate reports and prescription
requests
5Setting
- September 2005 - June 2006
- 16 primary care practices in the greater
Richmond, VA area - 3 inner-city, 4 rural, and 9 suburban
- 11 family medicine, 2 internal medicine,
and 3 with both specialties - Median of 4 providers range 2-7
6(No Transcript)
7Study Design
- Cluster-randomized controlled trial
- ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT00112268
- Control Traditional tobacco-use vital sign
- 2 sets of cross-sectional exit surveys
- 3-month pre-intervention period
- Block randomization of practices
- Treatment arm assignment
- 1 hour training session at 8 intervention
practices - 9-month comparison period
8Data Sources
- Brief exit survey distributed by research
assistants to adult patients - Minimal data set from ACS Quitline
- Semi-structured interviews with practice staff
9Survey Participants
- Adults who had just completed a visit with a
clinician - Physician, nurse practitioner, or physician
assistant - Exit surveys from 13,562 pre-intervention and
comparison period exit surveys - 18 smokers
- Outcome data from 1,815 smokers in comparison
period
10Intervention Elements
- Rooming staff used expanded vital sign
- Practice offered fax referral for proactive
telephone counseling - Patients contacted by ACS Quitline staff for
intake and enrollment in 4 session counseling
program - Bupropion SR fax prescription request form
- Individual patient outcomes report
- Quarterly benchmarked aggregate feedback
11Data Analysis
- Intensive counseling
- Affirmative answer to questions addressing
discussion of how to quit and/or referral - Adjustment for temporal sampling differences
among practices and providers - Nested, hierarchical logistic regression model
accounted for 3 sources of variation
12Principal Findings (1)
Counseling Behavior Survey Question Adjusted Affirmative Response Adjusted Affirmative Response Adjusted Affirmative Response Adjusted Affirmative Response
Counseling Behavior Survey Question Control Intervention Difference p value
Ask (A1) Did anyone ask you today if you smoke? 64.5 59.6 -4.9 0.45
Advise (A2) If you smoke, did anyone advise you today to stop smoking? 55.1 57.9 2.8 0.40
13Principal Findings (2)
Counseling Behavior Survey Question Adjusted Affirmative Response Adjusted Affirmative Response Adjusted Affirmative Response Adjusted Affirmative Response
Counseling Behavior Survey Question Control Intervention Difference p value
Intensive Counseling (A3-5Referral) Main Outcome 29.5 41.4 11.9 lt0.001
Discussion (A3-5) If you smoke, did anyone talk with you today about ideas or plans to help you quit smoking? 28.7 35.2 6.5 0.001
Referral If you smoke, were you referred today to a quit line? 8.7 21.4 12.7 lt0.001
14ACS Quitline Outcomes (1)(preliminary analysis
of limited data set)
- 329 referrals over 9 months
- 237 in Q1 66 in Q2 26 in Q3
- Referrals volume varied by practice
- Median 39.5 range 1 81
- Referrals volume varied by clinician
- Median 6 range 0 39
- Name missing on 34
- No referral attributed to 23.5 of clinicians
15ACS Quitline Outcomes (2)(preliminary analysis
of limited data set)
- Quitline reached 113 (34.3) for intake
- Multiple call protocol single phone number
- 88 (77.8) elected proactive counseling
- 48 (54.5) had at least one session
- 26 had 2, 17 had 3, and 6 had all 4 sessions
- 22 (45.8) not smoking at last contact
- Additional 7 (14.6) cut back 50
16Clinician/Staff Interviews (1)(preliminary
analysis of field notes and post-interview
summaries)
- Practices liked many aspects
- Systematic process for screening and counseling
- Concrete option to offer patients for intensive
counseling - Relative simplicity, ease of implementation
- Not a significant burden on clinicians or staff
- Great potential value to patients
17Clinician/Staff Interviews (2)(preliminary
analysis of field notes and post-interview
summaries)
- Variation in how QuitLink was implemented
- Likely led to variation in referral rates
- Practices offered suggestions for improvement
- (e.g., brochure explaining telephone counseling,
more feedback from quit line)
18Conclusions
- The intervention increased patient-reported
intensive counseling - Salutatory effect on reports of in-office
discussion and quit line referrals - Implementation and utilization varied
- Referral volumes declined over time
19Limitations
- Outcome was counseling, not cessation
- Relied on patient report of counseling
- Hawthorne effect possible
- Effect only measured for 9 months
- Cannot assess individual components
- Insufficient recruits for patient interviews
- Impact likely reduced by several factors
20Policy Implications
- Fax referral is a win-win arrangement
- Practices and quit lines can engage in
bidirectional communication - Screening on stage of change is possible and
should be done to reduce inappropriate referrals
21Related/Future Work
- Electronic referral in practices with EHR
- Pilot project with Virginia state quit line
(service provider is Free Clear) - RWJF Transition grant with second EHR
- Future studies refining QuitLink model and
evaluating additional and longer-term outcomes
22(No Transcript)