Soto Mas Francisco G, Papenfuss Richard L, Jacobson Holly E, Hsu Chiehwen Ed, Urrutia-Rojas Ximena, Kane William M
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2005 Nov 14;5:120. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-5-120.
U.S. Hispanic physicians constitute a considerable professional collective, and they may be most suited to attend to the health education needs of the growing U.S. Hispanic population. These educational needs include tobacco use prevention and smoking cessation. However, there is a lack of information on Hispanic physicians' tobacco intervention practices, their level of awareness and use of cessation protocols, and the type of programs that would best address their tobacco training needs. The purpose of this study was to assess the tobacco intervention practices and training needs of Hispanic physicians.
Data was collected through a validated survey instrument among a cross-sectional sample of self-reported Hispanic physicians. Data analyses included frequencies, descriptive statistics, and factorial analyses of variance.
The response rate was 55.5%. The majority of respondents (73.3%) were middle-age males. Less than half of respondents routinely performed the most basic intervention: asking patients about smoking status (44.4%) and advising smoking patients to quit (42.2%). Twenty-five percent assisted smoking patients by talking to them about the health risks of smoking, providing education materials or referring them to cessation programs. Only 4.4% routinely arranged follow-up visits or phone calls for smoking patients. The majority of respondents (64.4%) indicated that they prescribe cessation treatments to less than 20% of smoking patients. A few (4.4%) routinely used behavioral change techniques or programs. A minority (15.6%) indicated that they routinely ask their patients about exposure to tobacco smoke, and 6.7% assisted patients exposed to secondhand smoke in understanding the health risks associated with environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). The most frequently encountered barriers preventing respondents from intervening with patients who smoke included: time, lack of training, lack of receptivity by patients, and lack of reimbursement by third party payers. There was no significant main effect of type of physician, nor was there an interaction effect (gender by type of physician), on tobacco-related practices.
The results indicate that Hispanic physicians, similarly to U.S. physicians in general, do not meet the level of intervention recommended by health care agencies. The results presented will assist in the development of tobacco training initiatives for Hispanic physicians.
美国的西班牙裔医生构成了一个相当可观的专业群体,他们可能最适合满足美国不断增长的西班牙裔人口的健康教育需求。这些教育需求包括预防烟草使用和戒烟。然而,关于西班牙裔医生的烟草干预实践、他们对戒烟方案的认识和使用水平,以及最能满足他们烟草培训需求的项目类型,目前缺乏相关信息。本研究的目的是评估西班牙裔医生的烟草干预实践和培训需求。
通过一份经过验证的调查问卷,对自我报告为西班牙裔医生的横断面样本进行数据收集。数据分析包括频率、描述性统计和方差因子分析。
回复率为55.5%。大多数受访者(73.3%)为中年男性。不到一半的受访者常规进行最基本的干预:询问患者吸烟状况(44.4%)并建议吸烟患者戒烟(42.2%)。25%的受访者通过与吸烟患者谈论吸烟的健康风险、提供教育材料或转介他们参加戒烟项目来协助他们。只有4.4%的受访者常规为吸烟患者安排随访或电话回访。大多数受访者(64.4%)表示,他们为不到20%的吸烟患者开戒烟治疗药物。少数人(4.4%)常规使用行为改变技术或项目。少数人(15.6%)表示,他们常规询问患者是否接触烟草烟雾,6.7%的受访者协助接触二手烟的患者了解与环境烟草烟雾(ETS)相关的健康风险。阻碍受访者对吸烟患者进行干预的最常见障碍包括:时间、缺乏培训、患者缺乏接受度以及第三方支付者不予报销。医生类型对烟草相关实践没有显著的主效应,也没有交互效应(性别×医生类型)。
结果表明,与美国一般医生类似,西班牙裔医生未达到医疗保健机构推荐的干预水平。所呈现的结果将有助于为西班牙裔医生制定烟草培训计划。