Clinician perceptions of factors influencing referrals to a smoking cessation program

Jodi Summers Holtrop, Rebecca Malouin, David Weismantel, William C Wadland, Jodi Summers Holtrop, Rebecca Malouin, David Weismantel, William C Wadland

Abstract

Background: Referral of patients to smoking cessation telephone counseling (i.e., quitline) is an underutilized resource by primary care physicians. Previously, we conducted a randomized trial to determine the effectiveness of benchmarked feedback on clinician referrals to a quitline. Subsequently, we sought to understand the successful practices used by the high-referring clinicians, and the perceptions of the barriers of referring patients to a quitline among both high and non-referring clinicians in the trial.

Methods: We conducted a qualitative sub-study with subjects from the randomized trial, comparing high- and non-referring clinicians. Structured interviews were conducted and two investigators employed a thematic analysis of the transcribed data. Themes and included categories were organized into a thematic framework to represent the main response sets.

Results: As compared to non-referring clinicians, high-referring clinicians more often reported use of the quitline as a primary source of referral, an appreciation of the quitline as an additional resource, reduced barriers to use of the quitline referral process, and a greater personal motivation related to tobacco cessation. Time and competing demands were critical barriers to initiating smoking cessation treatment with patients for all clinicians. Clinicians reported that having one referral source, a referral coordinator, and reimbursement for tobacco counseling (as a billable code) would aid referral.

Conclusion: Further research is needed to test the effectiveness of new approaches in improving the connection of patients with smoking cessation resources.

Trial registration number: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00529256.

Figures

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Figure 1
Subject Flow.

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Source: PubMed

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