van den Brand Floor A, Nagelhout Gera E, Reda Ayalu A, Winkens Bjorn, Evers Silvia M A A, Kotz Daniel, van Schayck Onno Cp
Department of Family Medicine, Maastricht University (CAPHRI), P.debyeplein 1, Maastricht, Zuid-Limburg, Netherlands, 6229 HA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Sep 12;9(9):CD004305. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004305.pub5.
Tobacco smoking is the leading preventable cause of death worldwide, which makes it essential to stimulate smoking cessation. The financial cost of smoking cessation treatment can act as a barrier to those seeking support. We hypothesised that provision of financial assistance for people trying to quit smoking, or reimbursement of their care providers, could lead to an increased rate of successful quit attempts. This is an update of the original 2005 review.
The primary objective of this review was to assess the impact of reducing the costs for tobacco smokers or healthcare providers for using or providing smoking cessation treatment through healthcare financing interventions on abstinence from smoking. The secondary objectives were to examine the effects of different levels of financial support on the use or prescription of smoking cessation treatment, or both, and on the number of smokers making a quit attempt (quitting smoking for at least 24 hours). We also assessed the cost effectiveness of different financial interventions, and analysed the costs per additional quitter, or per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained.
We searched the Cochrane Tobacco Addiction Group Specialised Register in September 2016.
We considered randomised controlled trials (RCTs), controlled trials and interrupted time series studies involving financial benefit interventions to smokers or their healthcare providers, or both.
Two reviewers independently extracted data and assessed the quality of the included studies. We calculated risk ratios (RR) for individual studies on an intention-to-treat basis and performed meta-analysis using a random-effects model.
In the current update, we have added six new relevant studies, resulting in a total of 17 studies included in this review involving financial interventions directed at smokers or healthcare providers, or both.Full financial interventions directed at smokers had a favourable effect on abstinence at six months or longer when compared to no intervention (RR 1.77, 95% CI 1.37 to 2.28, I² = 33%, 9333 participants). There was no evidence that full coverage interventions increased smoking abstinence compared to partial coverage interventions (RR 1.02, 95% CI 0.71 to 1.48, I² = 64%, 5914 participants), but partial coverage interventions were more effective in increasing abstinence than no intervention (RR 1.27 95% CI 1.02 to 1.59, I² = 21%, 7108 participants). The economic evaluation showed costs per additional quitter ranging from USD 97 to USD 7646 for the comparison of full coverage with partial or no coverage.There was no clear evidence of an effect on smoking cessation when we pooled two trials of financial incentives directed at healthcare providers (RR 1.16, CI 0.98 to 1.37, I² = 0%, 2311 participants).Full financial interventions increased the number of participants making a quit attempt when compared to no interventions (RR 1.11, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.17, I² = 15%, 9065 participants). There was insufficient evidence to show whether partial financial interventions increased quit attempts compared to no interventions (RR 1.13, 95% CI 0.98 to 1.31, I² = 88%, 6944 participants).Full financial interventions increased the use of smoking cessation treatment compared to no interventions with regard to various pharmacological and behavioural treatments: nicotine replacement therapy (NRT): RR 1.79, 95% CI 1.54 to 2.09, I² = 35%, 9455 participants; bupropion: RR 3.22, 95% CI 1.41 to 7.34, I² = 71%, 6321 participants; behavioural therapy: RR 1.77, 95% CI 1.19 to 2.65, I² = 75%, 9215 participants.There was evidence that partial coverage compared to no coverage reported a small positive effect on the use of bupropion (RR 1.15, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.29, I² = 0%, 6765 participants). Interventions directed at healthcare providers increased the use of behavioural therapy (RR 1.69, 95% CI 1.01 to 2.86, I² = 85%, 25820 participants), but not the use of NRT and/or bupropion (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.76 to 1.18, I² = 6%, 2311 participants).We assessed the quality of the evidence for the main outcome, abstinence from smoking, as moderate. In most studies participants were not blinded to the different study arms and researchers were not blinded to the allocated interventions. Furthermore, there was not always sufficient information on attrition rates. We detected some imprecision but we judged this to be of minor consequence on the outcomes of this study.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Full financial interventions directed at smokers when compared to no financial interventions increase the proportion of smokers who attempt to quit, use smoking cessation treatments, and succeed in quitting. There was no clear and consistent evidence of an effect on smoking cessation from financial incentives directed at healthcare providers. We are only moderately confident in the effect estimate because there was some risk of bias due to a lack of blinding in participants and researchers, and insufficient information on attrition rates.
吸烟是全球可预防的首要死因,因此促进戒烟至关重要。戒烟治疗的经济成本可能成为寻求支持的人的障碍。我们假设,为试图戒烟的人提供经济援助或报销其护理提供者的费用,可能会提高成功戒烟尝试的比率。这是对2005年原始综述的更新。
本综述的主要目的是评估通过医疗融资干预措施降低吸烟者或医疗服务提供者使用或提供戒烟治疗的成本对戒烟的影响。次要目的是研究不同水平的经济支持对戒烟治疗的使用或处方,或两者兼而有之,以及对尝试戒烟(戒烟至少24小时)的吸烟者数量的影响。我们还评估了不同经济干预措施的成本效益,并分析了每增加一名戒烟者或每获得一个质量调整生命年(QALY)的成本。
我们于2016年9月检索了Cochrane烟草成瘾小组专业注册库。
我们考虑了随机对照试验(RCT)、对照试验和中断时间序列研究,这些研究涉及对吸烟者或其医疗服务提供者,或两者的经济利益干预。
两名综述作者独立提取数据并评估纳入研究的质量。我们在意向性分析的基础上计算了各个研究的风险比(RR),并使用随机效应模型进行荟萃分析。
在本次更新中,我们增加了六项新的相关研究,本综述共纳入17项涉及针对吸烟者或医疗服务提供者,或两者的经济干预的研究。与无干预相比,针对吸烟者的全面经济干预在六个月或更长时间的戒烟方面有积极效果(RR 1.77,95%CI 1.37至2.28,I² = 33%,9333名参与者)。没有证据表明与部分覆盖干预相比,全面覆盖干预能提高戒烟率(RR 1.02,95%CI 0.71至1.48,I² = 64%,5914名参与者),但部分覆盖干预在提高戒烟率方面比无干预更有效(RR 1.27,95%CI 1.02至1.59,I² = 21%,7108名参与者)。经济评估显示,全面覆盖与部分覆盖或无覆盖相比,每增加一名戒烟者的成本在97美元至7646美元之间。当我们汇总两项针对医疗服务提供者的经济激励试验时,没有明确证据表明对戒烟有影响(RR 1.16,CI 0.98至1.37,I² = 0%,2311名参与者)。与无干预相比,全面经济干预增加了尝试戒烟的参与者数量(RR 1.11,95%CI 1.04至1.17,I² = 15%,9065名参与者)。没有足够的证据表明与无干预相比,部分经济干预是否增加了戒烟尝试(RR 1.13,95%CI 0.98至1.31,I² = 88%,6944名参与者)。与无干预相比,全面经济干预在各种药物和行为治疗方面增加了戒烟治疗的使用:尼古丁替代疗法(NRT):RR 1.79,95%CI 1.54至2.09,I² = 35%,9455名参与者;安非他酮:RR 3.22,95%CI 1.41至7.34,I² = 71%,6321名参与者;行为疗法:RR 1.77,95%CI 1.19至2.65,I² = 75%,9215名参与者。有证据表明,与无覆盖相比,部分覆盖对安非他酮的使用有小的积极影响(RR 1.15,95%CI 1.03至1.29,I² = 0%,6765名参与者)。针对医疗服务提供者的干预增加了行为疗法的使用(RR 1.69,95%CI 1.01至2.86,I² = 85%,25820名参与者),但没有增加NRT和/或安非他酮的使用(RR 0.94,95%CI 0.76至1.