Abstract

BackgroundSmokers usually abstain from tobacco while hospitalized but relapse after discharge. Inpatient interventions may encourage sustained quitting. We previously demonstrated that a decision support tool embedded in an electronic health record (EHR) improved physicians’ treatment of hospitalized smokers. This report describes the effect on quit rates of this decision support tool and order set for hospitalized smokers.MethodsIn a single hospital system, 254 physicians were randomized 1:1 to receive a decision support tool and order set, embedded in the EHR. When an adult patient was admitted to a medical service, an electronic alert appeared if current smoking was recorded in the EHR. For physicians receiving the intervention, the alert linked to an order set for tobacco treatment medications and electronic referral to the state tobacco quitline. Additionally, “Tobacco Use Disorder” was added to the patient’s problem list, and a secure message was sent to the patient’s primary care provider (PCP). In the control arm, no alert appeared. Patients were contacted by phone at 1, 6, and 12 months; those reporting tobacco abstinence at 12 months were asked to return to measure exhaled carbon monoxide. Generalized estimating equations were used to model the data.ResultsFrom 2013 to 2016, the alert fired for 10,939 patients (5391 intervention, 5548 control). Compared to control physicians, intervention physicians were more likely to order tobacco treatment medication, populate the problem list with tobacco use disorder, refer to the quitline, and notify the patient’s PCP. In a subset of 1044 patients recruited for intensive follow-up, one-year quit rates for intervention and control patients were, respectively, 11.5% and 11.6%, (p = 0.94), after controlling for age, sex, race, ethnicity, and insurance. Similarly, there were no differences in 1- and 6-month quit rates.ConclusionsAlthough we were able to improve processes of care, long-term tobacco quit rates were unchanged. This likely reflects, in part, the need for sustained quitting interventions, and higher-than-expected quit rates in controls. Future enhancements should improve prescription of medications for smoking cessation at discharge, engagement of primary care providers, and perhaps direct engagement of patients in a more longitudinal approach.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01691105. Registered on September 12, 2012

Highlights

  • Smokers usually abstain from tobacco while hospitalized but relapse after discharge

  • We report the efficacy of E-STOPS on short- and long-term rates of tobacco abstinence

  • Of the 9754 patients excluded from the trial, the most common reasons for exclusion were the following: smoking fewer than 5 cigarettes/day (1264), living outside New Haven County (943), having an active psychiatric problem or being unable to provide consent (1292), and unable to be approached by the research assistants (RAs) because the patient was not in the hospital room at the time of assessment (1229)

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Summary

Introduction

Smokers usually abstain from tobacco while hospitalized but relapse after discharge. Inpatient interventions may encourage sustained quitting. Tobacco’s enduring status as the leading cause of preventable death and illness in the United States has led to screening and treatment being publicly reported standards of the quality of inpatient care, used by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) for patients admitted with acute myocardial infarction, pneumonia, or congestive heart failure. It is a core measure of the National Quality Forum and part of an optional measure set offered by the Joint Commission [1].

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