In-hospital offer helps lung patients quit smoking
By Joene Hendry
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Long-term smokers offered a smoking cessation program when they were hospitalized for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease problems were more than twice as likely to be non-smokers 1 year later than those not offered a smoking cessation program, researchers from Denmark report.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) includes non-reversible conditions like emphysema and chronic bronchitis that impede breathing.
"Smoking cessation will slow down this process and should therefore be thought of as a treatment in the patients still smoking," Anders Borglykke told Reuters Health.
Borglykke, a PhD student from the Research Centre for Prevention and Health at Glostrup University Hospital, and colleagues assessed smoking cessation rates among 121 patients offered participation in a nurse-led smoking cessation program. The 5-week program included behavioral modification and nicotine replacement if needed.
The investigators compared 1-year smoking abstention rates in the intervention group and in a comparison "control" group of 102 patients given only standard information on the benefits of not smoking.
The study participants were 66 years old on average and had smoked for about 48 years, the researchers report in The Clinical Respiratory Journal.
Of the patients offered the smoking cessation program, 36 (30 percent) had stopped smoking after 1 year. By contrast, just 13 (13 percent) of the control group were not smoking at this time point.
Patients in the intervention group also reported more improvement in cough, phlegm, shortness of breath and overall health and quality of life than those not offered smoking cessation, Borglykke and colleagues report. Continued...






