Longo D R, Feldman M M, Kruse R L, Brownson R C, Petroski G F, Hewett J E
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Missouri-Columbia School of Medicine, USA.
Tob Control. 1998 Spring;7(1):47-55. doi: 10.1136/tc.7.1.47.
To determine how well hospitals complied with the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) tobacco control standards, which required banning smoking in hospital buildings; to explore issues involved in developing and implementing smoking bans; and to ascertain the perceived success of the policies.
Postal survey conducted January through June 1994.
Stratified random sample of American hospitals surveyed by JCAHO (n = 1055).
Enacting smoking policies more restrictive than the JCAHO standard; the respondent's judgment of the relative success of the hospital's smoking policy.
More than 96% of hospitals complied with the smoking ban standard; 41.4% enacted policies that were more restrictive than required by JCAHO. Several characteristics were associated with exceeding JCAHO requirements: location in a "non-tobacco state"; having fewer than 100 beds; location in a metropolitan statistical area; having unionsed employees; and having no psychiatric or substance abuse unit, favour having the same tobacco policy in psychiatry and substance abuse units as the rest of the hospital. More than 95% of respondents viewed their hospital's policy as successful. The JCAHO requirements and concern for employees' health were the major forces influencing hospitals to go smoke-free. Negative employee morale and lack of acceptance by visitors and patients were the most commonly cited barriers to overcome when implementing smoke-free policies.
Smoking bans were successfully implemented in American hospitals, with many restricting smoking beyond the JCAHO standard. Other industries wishing to follow hospitals' lead would be most likely to succeed in the context of a social norm favouring a smoking ban and regulation by an outside agency.
确定医院对医疗机构评审联合委员会(JCAHO)烟草控制标准的遵守情况,该标准要求在医院建筑内禁止吸烟;探讨制定和实施禁烟令所涉及的问题;并确定这些政策的感知成功率。
1994年1月至6月进行的邮政调查。
由JCAHO调查的美国医院分层随机样本(n = 1055)。
制定比JCAHO标准更严格的吸烟政策;受访者对医院吸烟政策相对成功率的判断。
超过96%的医院遵守了禁烟标准;41.4%的医院制定了比JCAHO要求更严格的政策。有几个特征与超出JCAHO要求相关:位于“无烟州”;床位少于100张;位于大都市统计区;有工会员工;没有精神科或药物滥用科室,倾向于在精神科和药物滥用科室与医院其他科室实行相同的烟草政策。超过95%的受访者认为他们医院的政策是成功的。JCAHO的要求和对员工健康的关注是促使医院实现无烟的主要力量。员工士气低落以及访客和患者的不接受是实施无烟政策时最常提到的需要克服的障碍。
美国医院成功实施了禁烟令,许多医院的禁烟措施比JCAHO标准更为严格。其他希望效仿医院做法的行业,在有利于禁烟的社会规范和外部机构监管的背景下最有可能取得成功。