Foster Casey D, Quinn Mackenzie Hosie, Koita Fodie, Leone Frank T, Stevens Nathaniel, Siegel Scott D, Wileyto E Paul, Ziedonis Douglas, Schnoll Robert A
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Pulmonary, Allergy, & Critical Care Division, University of Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Drug Alcohol Depend Rep. 2023 Nov 23;9:100208. doi: 10.1016/j.dadr.2023.100208. eCollection 2023 Dec.
People with mental illness (MI) are more likely to smoke cigarettes and less likely to receive treatment for tobacco use than the general population. Understanding factors associated with improved staff treatment of tobacco use in community mental health settings has received limited study.
We used data from a completed cluster-randomized clinical trial that tested two interventions designed to increase treatment for tobacco use in mental health clinics. Among 222 clinic staff, we examined demographic and employment characteristics, changes in perceived skills, knowledge, and beliefs using the S-KAP (i.e., perceptions of staff responsibility to treat tobacco use; client quit motivation; client outcomes; and barriers) as predictors of change in clinician reported delivery of tobacco use treatment following training.
Clinician reported treatment of client tobacco use significantly increased from baseline to week 52 across both study arms (<0.001). This increase in reported treatment for tobacco use was associated with increases from baseline to week 52 in clinician reported skills to treat tobacco use, perceptions of responsibility to treat client tobacco use, and perceptions about client motivation to quit smoking (p's<0.05).
Training clinicians in community mental healthcare to address client tobacco use may improve outcomes by helping them to develop the needed skills, convincing them that treating tobacco use is part of their role as clinicians, and by helping clinicians to recognize that clients are motivated to quit smoking. These may be targets to improve how clinicians in community health settings address client tobacco use.
与普通人群相比,患有精神疾病的人吸烟的可能性更大,接受烟草使用治疗的可能性更小。关于社区心理健康环境中与改善工作人员对烟草使用治疗相关因素的研究有限。
我们使用了一项已完成的整群随机临床试验的数据,该试验测试了两种旨在增加心理健康诊所对烟草使用治疗的干预措施。在222名诊所工作人员中,我们检查了人口统计学和就业特征,使用S-KAP(即工作人员对治疗烟草使用的责任认知、客户戒烟动机、客户结果和障碍)来衡量感知技能、知识和信念的变化,以此作为培训后临床医生报告的烟草使用治疗提供情况变化的预测指标。
在两个研究组中,临床医生报告的对客户烟草使用的治疗从基线到第52周均显著增加(<0.001)。报告的烟草使用治疗增加与临床医生报告的治疗烟草使用技能从基线到第52周的增加、对治疗客户烟草使用的责任认知以及对客户戒烟动机的认知增加相关(p值<0.05)。
对社区精神卫生保健中的临床医生进行培训以解决客户的烟草使用问题,可能会通过帮助他们发展所需技能、使他们相信治疗烟草使用是其作为临床医生角色的一部分以及帮助临床医生认识到客户有戒烟动机来改善治疗效果。这些可能是改善社区卫生环境中临床医生处理客户烟草使用方式的目标。