A clinical practice guideline for treating tobacco use and dependence: 2008 update. A U.S. Public Health Service report

Clinical Practice Guideline Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence 2008 Update Panel, Liaisons, and Staff, Michael Fiore, Carlos Roberto Jaén, Timothy B Baker, William C Bailey, Glenn Bennett, Neal L Benowitz, Bruce A Christiansen, Michael Connell, Susan J Curry, Sally Faith Dorfman, David Fraser, Erika S Froelicher, Michael G Goldstein, Victor Hasselblad, Cheryl G Healton, Stephen Heishman, Patricia Nez Henderson, Richard B Heyman, Corinne Husten, Howard K Koh, Thomas E Kottke, Harry A Lando, Cathlyn Leitzke, Robert E Mecklenburg, Robin J Mermelstein, Glen Morgan, Patricia Dolan Mullen, Ernestine W Murray, C Tracy Orleans, Megan E Piper, Lawrence Robinson, Maxine L Stitzer, Wendy Theobald, Anthony C Tommasello, Louise Villejo, Mary Ellen Wewers, Christine Williams, Clinical Practice Guideline Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence 2008 Update Panel, Liaisons, and Staff, Michael Fiore, Carlos Roberto Jaén, Timothy B Baker, William C Bailey, Glenn Bennett, Neal L Benowitz, Bruce A Christiansen, Michael Connell, Susan J Curry, Sally Faith Dorfman, David Fraser, Erika S Froelicher, Michael G Goldstein, Victor Hasselblad, Cheryl G Healton, Stephen Heishman, Patricia Nez Henderson, Richard B Heyman, Corinne Husten, Howard K Koh, Thomas E Kottke, Harry A Lando, Cathlyn Leitzke, Robert E Mecklenburg, Robin J Mermelstein, Glen Morgan, Patricia Dolan Mullen, Ernestine W Murray, C Tracy Orleans, Megan E Piper, Lawrence Robinson, Maxine L Stitzer, Wendy Theobald, Anthony C Tommasello, Louise Villejo, Mary Ellen Wewers, Christine Williams

Abstract

Objective: To summarize the U.S. Public Health Service guideline Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence: 2008 Update, which provides recommendations for clinical interventions and system changes to promote the treatment of tobacco dependence.

Participants: An independent panel of 24 scientists and clinicians selected by the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality on behalf of the U.S. Public Health Service. A consortium of eight governmental and nonprofit organizations sponsored the update.

Evidence: Approximately 8700 English-language, peer-reviewed articles and abstracts, published between 1975 and 2007, were reviewed for data that addressed assessment and treatment of tobacco dependence. This literature served as the basis for more than 35 meta-analyses.

Consensus process: Two panel meetings and numerous conference calls and staff meetings were held to evaluate meta-analyses and relevant literature, to synthesize the results, and to develop recommendations. The updated guideline was then externally reviewed by more than 90 experts, made available for public comment, and revised.

Conclusions: This evidence-based, updated guideline provides specific recommendations regarding brief and intensive tobacco-cessation interventions as well as system-level changes designed to promote the assessment and treatment of tobacco use. Brief clinical approaches for patients willing and unwilling to quit are described.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
2008 Update development process
Figure 2
Figure 2
Model for treatment of tobacco use and dependence. aRelapse prevention interventions are not necessary in the case of the adult who has not used tobacco for many years

Source: PubMed

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