Trapskin Philip J, Sheehy Ann, Creswell Paul D, McCarthy Danielle E, Skora Amy, Adsit Rob T, Rose Anne E, Bishop Candace, Bugg Jessica, Iglar Emily, Zehner Mark E, Shirley Daniel, Williams Brian S, Hood Adam J, McElray Krista, Baker Timothy B, Fiore Michael C
University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA.
UW Health, Madison, WI, USA.
Hosp Pharm. 2022 Feb;57(1):167-175. doi: 10.1177/0018578721999809. Epub 2021 Mar 5.
Although people who smoke cigarettes are overrepresented among hospital inpatients, few are connected with smoking cessation treatment during their hospitalization. Training, accountability for medication use, and monitoring of all patients position pharmacists well to deliver cessation interventions to all hospitalized patients who smoke. A large Midwestern University hospital implemented a pharmacist-led smoking cessation intervention. A delegation protocol for hospital pharmacy inpatients who smoked cigarettes gave hospital pharmacists the authority to order nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) during hospitalization and upon discharge, and for referral to the Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line (WTQL) at discharge. Eligible patients received the smoking cessation intervention unless they actively refused (ie, "opt-out"). The program was pilot tested in phases, with pharmacist feedback between phases, and then implemented hospital-wide. Interviews, surveys, and informal mechanisms identified ways to improve implementation and workflows. Feedback from pharmacists led to changes that improved workflow, training and patient education materials, and enhanced adoption and reach. Refining implementation strategies across pilot phases increased the percentage of eligible smokers offered pharmacist-delivered cessation support from 37% to 76%, prescribed NRT from 2% to 44%, and referred to the WTQL from 3% to 32%. Hospitalizations provide an ideal opportunity for patients to make a tobacco quit attempt, and pharmacists can capitalize on this opportunity by integrating smoking cessation treatment into existing inpatient medication reconciliation workflows. Pharmacist-led implementation strategies developed in this study may be applicable in other inpatient settings.
尽管住院患者中吸烟者的比例过高,但很少有人在住院期间接受戒烟治疗。培训、药物使用问责制以及对所有患者的监测,使药剂师有能力为所有吸烟的住院患者提供戒烟干预措施。中西部一所大型大学医院实施了由药剂师主导的戒烟干预措施。针对吸烟的住院药房患者的授权协议赋予医院药剂师在住院期间和出院时订购尼古丁替代疗法(NRT)以及在出院时转介至威斯康星州戒烟热线(WTQL)的权力。符合条件的患者除非主动拒绝(即“选择退出”),否则都会接受戒烟干预措施。该项目分阶段进行试点测试,各阶段之间收集药剂师的反馈意见,然后在全院范围内实施。通过访谈、调查和非正式机制确定改进实施和工作流程的方法。药剂师的反馈促使了一些改变,这些改变改善了工作流程、培训和患者教育材料,并提高了采用率和覆盖面。在试点阶段不断完善实施策略,使得接受药剂师提供的戒烟支持的符合条件吸烟者的比例从37%提高到了76%,开具NRT的比例从2%提高到了44%,转介至WTQL的比例从3%提高到了32%。住院为患者提供了尝试戒烟的理想机会,药剂师可以通过将戒烟治疗纳入现有的住院用药核对工作流程来利用这一机会。本研究中制定的由药剂师主导的实施策略可能适用于其他住院环境。