Twyman Laura, Cowles Carla, Walsberger Scott C, Baker Amanda L, Bonevski Billie
Tabacco Control Unit, Cancer Council NSW, Woolloomooloo, NSW, Australia.
School of Medicine and Public Health, Faculty of Health and Medicine, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
Front Psychiatry. 2019 Jul 17;10:503. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00503. eCollection 2019.
Addressing the high prevalence of tobacco use experienced by people with severe mental illness (SMI) requires consideration of the influence of wider cultural, socioeconomic and environmental factors. This qualitative study aimed to examine the impact of social and living environments on tobacco use and cessation by people with SMI accessing community managed mental health services. The perspectives of both staff and consumers with SMI were explored. Semi-structured focus groups were undertaken with a purposive sample of community mental health staff and consumers from three sites in three major cities in NSW, Australia. Two sites provided outreach support, and one site provided residential support. Data were collected (2017-2018) until saturation was reached. Focus groups were audio-recorded and transcribed, and thematic analysis was conducted. Thirty-one staff and 17 consumers participated separately in six focus groups. Themes identified by staff included a degree of fatalism, conceptualising tobacco use as choice rather than addiction and tensions between cessation support and broader models of care. Staff viewed smoke-free home and mental health service policies as effective at promoting quitting but contradictory to recovery-oriented models of care. Consumers identified smoking as an integral part of life and social networks, as a way of maintaining control and lack of social support to quit as key themes. While many consumers reported smoking inside the home, others described enforcing smoke-free rules. Social and living environments played an integral role in tobacco use and cessation for both staff and consumers. The role of community managed mental health organisations in addressing tobacco use within social and living environments was not strongly supported by staff and sometimes seen as antithetical to recovery-oriented models of care. Potential ways to address this include education and training for prospective and current community mental health organisation staff highlighting the synergy between the recovery-oriented model and provision of preventive health support.
解决重度精神疾病(SMI)患者中普遍存在的烟草使用问题,需要考虑更广泛的文化、社会经济和环境因素的影响。这项定性研究旨在探讨社会和生活环境对使用社区管理心理健康服务的SMI患者烟草使用及戒烟的影响。研究探讨了工作人员和SMI消费者双方的观点。对来自澳大利亚新南威尔士州三个主要城市三个地点的社区心理健康工作人员和消费者进行了有目的抽样,开展了半结构化焦点小组讨论。两个地点提供外展支持,一个地点提供住宿支持。数据收集工作持续到2017 - 2018年直至饱和。焦点小组讨论进行了录音和转录,并开展了主题分析。31名工作人员和17名消费者分别参加了6个焦点小组。工作人员确定的主题包括一定程度的宿命论、将烟草使用概念化为选择而非成瘾,以及戒烟支持与更广泛护理模式之间的矛盾。工作人员认为无烟家庭和心理健康服务政策在促进戒烟方面有效,但与以康复为导向的护理模式相矛盾。消费者将吸烟视为生活和社交网络的一个组成部分,是保持控制的一种方式,而缺乏戒烟的社会支持是关键主题。虽然许多消费者报告在家中吸烟,但也有人描述了执行无烟规定的情况。社会和生活环境在工作人员和消费者的烟草使用及戒烟方面都发挥了不可或缺的作用。社区管理的心理健康组织在社会和生活环境中解决烟草使用问题方面所起的作用,并未得到工作人员的有力支持,有时甚至被视为与以康复为导向的护理模式背道而驰。解决这一问题的潜在方法包括对未来和现任社区心理健康组织工作人员进行教育和培训,强调以康复为导向的模式与提供预防性健康支持之间的协同作用。