Teaching Medical Students to Help Patients Quit Smoking: Outcomes of a 10-School Randomized Controlled Trial

Judith K Ockene, Rashelle B Hayes, Linda C Churchill, Sybil L Crawford, Denise G Jolicoeur, David M Murray, Abigail B Shoben, Sean P David, Kristi J Ferguson, Kathryn N Huggett, Michael Adams, Catherine A Okuliar, Robin L Gross, Pat F Bass 3rd, Ruth B Greenberg, Frank T Leone, Kola S Okuyemi, David W Rudy, Jonathan B Waugh, Alan C Geller, Judith K Ockene, Rashelle B Hayes, Linda C Churchill, Sybil L Crawford, Denise G Jolicoeur, David M Murray, Abigail B Shoben, Sean P David, Kristi J Ferguson, Kathryn N Huggett, Michael Adams, Catherine A Okuliar, Robin L Gross, Pat F Bass 3rd, Ruth B Greenberg, Frank T Leone, Kola S Okuyemi, David W Rudy, Jonathan B Waugh, Alan C Geller

Abstract

Background: Early in medical education, physicians must develop competencies needed for tobacco dependence treatment.

Objective: To assess the effect of a multi-modal tobacco dependence treatment curriculum on medical students' counseling skills.

Design: A group-randomized controlled trial (2010-2014) included ten U.S. medical schools that were randomized to receive either multi-modal tobacco treatment education (MME) or traditional tobacco treatment education (TE).

Setting/participants: Students from the classes of 2012 and 2014 at ten medical schools participated. Students from the class of 2012 (N = 1345) completed objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs), and 50 % (N = 660) were randomly selected for pre-intervention evaluation. A total of 72.9 % of eligible students (N = 1096) from the class of 2014 completed an OSCE and 69.7 % (N = 1047) completed pre and post surveys.

Interventions: The MME included a Web-based course, a role-play classroom demonstration, and a clerkship booster session. Clerkship preceptors in MME schools participated in an academic detailing module and were encouraged to be role models for third-year students.

Measurements: The primary outcome was student tobacco treatment skills using the 5As measured by an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) scored on a 33-item behavior checklist. Secondary outcomes were student self-reported skills for performing 5As and pharmacotherapy counseling.

Results: Although the difference was not statistically significant, MME students completed more tobacco counseling behaviors on the OSCE checklist (mean 8.7 [SE 0.6] vs. mean 8.0 [SE 0.6], p = 0.52) than TE students. Several of the individual Assist and Arrange items were significantly more likely to have been completed by MME students, including suggesting behavioral strategies (11.8 % vs. 4.5 %, p < 0.001) and providing information regarding quitline (21.0 % vs. 3.8 %, p < 0.001). MME students reported higher self-efficacy for Assist, Arrange, and Pharmacotherapy counseling items (ps ≤0.05).

Limitations: Inclusion of only ten schools limits generalizability.

Conclusions: Subsequent interventions should incorporate lessons learned from this first randomized controlled trial of a multi-modal longitudinal tobacco treatment curriculum in multiple U.S. medical schools. NIH Trial Registry Number: NCT01905618.

Keywords: counseling; medical school curriculum; medical student behaviors; objective structured clinical examination; randomized controlled trial; tobacco dependence treatment.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Consort diagram/flow diagram. a Primary outcome OSCE data. b 5A self-efficacy survey data
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Self-efficacy by randomization assignment

Source: PubMed

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