Young-Wolff Kelly C, Adams Sara R, Tan Andy S L, Adams Alyce S, Klebaner Daniella, Campbell Cynthia I, Satre Derek D, Salloum Ramzi G, Carter-Harris Lisa, Prochaska Judith J
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Prev Med Rep. 2019 Mar 15;14:100847. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2019.100847. eCollection 2019 Jun.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) promised to narrow smoking disparities by expanding access to healthcare and mandating comprehensive coverage for tobacco treatment starting in 2014. We examined whether two years after ACA implementation disparities in receiving clinician advice to quit and smokers' knowledge and use of treatment resources remained. We conducted telephone interviews in 2016 with a stratified random sample of self-reported smokers newly enrolled in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California's (KPNC) integrated healthcare delivery system in 2014 ( = 491; 50% female; 53% non-white; 6% Spanish language). We used Poisson regression with robust standard errors to test whether sociodemographics, insurance type, comorbidities, smoking status in 2016 (former, light/nondaily [<5 cigarettes per day], daily), and preferred language (English or Spanish) were associated with receiving clinician advice to quit and knowledge and use of tobacco treatment. We included an interaction between smoking status and language to test whether the relation between smoking status and key outcomes varied with preferred language. Overall, 80% of respondents received clinician advice to quit, 84% knew that KPNC offers cessation counseling, 54% knew that cessation pharmacotherapy is free, 54% used pharmacotherapy, and 6% used counseling. In multivariate models, Spanish-speaking light/nondaily smokers had significantly lower rates of all outcomes, while there was no association with other demographic and clinical characteristics. Following ACA implementation, most smokers newly enrolled in KPNC received clinician advice to quit and over half used pharmacotherapy, yet counseling utilization was low. Spanish-language outreach efforts and treatment services are recommended, particularly for adults who are light/nondaily smokers.
《平价医疗法案》(ACA)承诺通过扩大医疗保健服务可及性并自2014年起强制要求对烟草治疗提供全面覆盖,来缩小吸烟差异。我们研究了ACA实施两年后,在接受临床医生戒烟建议以及吸烟者对治疗资源的知晓和使用方面的差异是否依然存在。2016年,我们对2014年新加入北加利福尼亚凯撒医疗集团(KPNC)综合医疗服务体系的自我报告吸烟者进行分层随机抽样电话访谈(n = 491;50%为女性;53%为非白人;6%使用西班牙语)。我们使用稳健标准误的泊松回归来检验社会人口统计学特征、保险类型、合并症、2016年的吸烟状况(已戒烟、轻度/非每日吸烟[每天<5支香烟]、每日吸烟)以及首选语言(英语或西班牙语)是否与接受临床医生戒烟建议以及对烟草治疗的知晓和使用相关。我们纳入了吸烟状况与语言之间的交互项,以检验吸烟状况与关键结局之间的关系是否因首选语言而异。总体而言,80%的受访者接受了临床医生的戒烟建议,84%知道KPNC提供戒烟咨询,54%知道戒烟药物治疗是免费的,54%使用了药物治疗,6%使用了咨询服务。在多变量模型中,讲西班牙语的轻度/非每日吸烟者在所有结局方面的发生率显著较低,而与其他人口统计学和临床特征无关。ACA实施后,可以看到新加入KPNC的大多数吸烟者接受了临床医生的戒烟建议,超过一半的人使用了药物治疗,但咨询服务的利用率较低。建议开展西班牙语外展工作和治疗服务,尤其是针对轻度/非每日吸烟的成年人。