Khanna Priya, Clifton Andrew V, Banks David, Tosh Graeme E
Rehabilitation and Recovery, Adult Psychiatry, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust, Newcastle, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Jan 28;1(1):CD009704. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009704.pub2.
People with a serious mental illness are more likely to smoke more and to be more dependent smokers than the general population. This may be due to a wide range of factors that could include a common aetiology to both smoking and the illness, self medication, smoking to alleviate adverse effects of medications, boredom in the existing environment, or a combination of these factors. It is important to undertake this review to facilitate improvements in both the health and safety of people with serious mental illness who smoke, and to reduce the overall burden of costs (both financial and health) to the smoker and, eventually, to the taxpayer.
To review the effects of smoking cessation advice for people with serious mental illness.
We searched the Cochrane Schizophrenia Group Specialized Trials Register up to 2 April 2015, which is based on regular searches of CENTRAL, BIOSIS, PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and trial registries. We also undertook unsystematic searches of a sample of the component databases (BNI, CINHAL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO), up to 2 April 2015, and searched references of all identified studies
We planned to include all randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that focussed on smoking cessation advice versus standard care or comparing smoking cessation advice with other more focussed methods of delivering care or information.
The review authors (PK, AC, and DB) independently screened search results but did not identify any trials that fulfilled the inclusion criteria of this review.
We did not identify any RCTs that evaluated advice regarding smoking cessation for people with serious mental illness. The excluded studies illustrate that randomisation of packages of care relevant to smokers with serious mental illness is possible.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: People with serious mental illness are more likely to smoke than the general population. Yet we could not find any high quality evidence to guide the smoking cessation advice healthcare professionals pass onto service users. This is an area where trials are possible and needed.
与普通人群相比,患有严重精神疾病的人吸烟更多且烟瘾更大。这可能是由于多种因素,包括吸烟与疾病的共同病因、自我用药、吸烟以减轻药物的不良反应、现有环境中的无聊感,或这些因素的综合作用。进行这项综述很重要,以便改善吸烟的严重精神疾病患者的健康和安全状况,并减轻吸烟者乃至最终纳税人的总体成本负担(包括经济和健康方面)。
综述针对患有严重精神疾病的人提供戒烟建议的效果。
我们检索了截至2015年4月2日的Cochrane精神分裂症组专业试验注册库,该注册库基于对CENTRAL、BIOSIS、PubMed、MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、PsycINFO和试验注册库的定期检索。我们还在2015年4月2日前对部分组成数据库(BNI、CINHAL、EMBASE、MEDLINE和PsycINFO)进行了非系统检索,并检索了所有已识别研究的参考文献。
我们计划纳入所有聚焦于戒烟建议与标准护理对比,或戒烟建议与其他更具针对性的护理或信息提供方法对比的随机对照试验(RCT)。
综述作者(PK、AC和DB)独立筛选检索结果,但未识别出任何符合本综述纳入标准的试验。
我们未识别出任何评估针对患有严重精神疾病的人提供戒烟建议的RCT。被排除的研究表明,对与患有严重精神疾病的吸烟者相关的护理套餐进行随机分组是可行的。
患有严重精神疾病的人比普通人群更易吸烟。然而,我们未能找到任何高质量证据来指导医疗保健专业人员向服务使用者提供的戒烟建议。这是一个可以且需要进行试验的领域。