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The old and familiar meets the new and unknown: patient and clinician perceptions on e-cigarettes for smoking reduction in UK general practice, a qualitative interview study

Albury, Charlotte; Barnes, Rebecca; Ferrey, Anne; Coleman, Tim; Gilbert, Hazel; Naughton, Felix; Aveyard, Paul; Begh, Rachna; MaSC study investigators

The old and familiar meets the new and unknown: patient and clinician perceptions on e-cigarettes for smoking reduction in UK general practice, a qualitative interview study Thumbnail


Authors

Charlotte Albury

Rebecca Barnes

Anne Ferrey

Hazel Gilbert

Felix Naughton

Paul Aveyard

Rachna Begh

MaSC study investigators



Abstract

Background and Aims: Clinicians could promote e-cigarettes for harm reduction to people who smoke but cannot stop, but many clinicians feel uneasy doing so. In a randomized controlled trial (RCT), primary care clinicians offered free e-cigarettes and encouraged people with chronic diseases who were unwilling to stop smoking to switch to vaping. We interviewed clinicians and patients to understand how to adopt harm reduction in routine practice. Design: Qualitative analysis nested within an RCT, comprising thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with primary care clinicians who delivered the trial intervention, and patients who took part. Setting: Primary care clinics in England. Participants/Cases: Twenty-one patients and 11 clinicians, purposively sampled from an RCT. Measurements: We qualitatively explored patients’ and clinicians’ experiences of: being offered/offering an e-cigarette, past and current perceptions about e-cigarettes and applying a harm reduction approach. Findings: Four themes captured clinicians’ and patients’ reported perspectives. These were: (1) concepts of safety/risk, with clinicians concerned about recommending a product with unknown long-term risks and patients preferring the known risks of cigarettes; (2) clinicians felt they were going out on a limb by offering these as though they were prescribing them, whereas patients did not share this view; (3) equating quitting with success, as both patients and clinicians conceptualized e-cigarettes as quitting aids; and (4) unchanged views, as clinicians reported that training did not change their existing views about e-cigarettes. These themes were united by the higher-order concept: ‘The old and familiar meets the new and unknown’, as a contradiction between this new approach and long-established methods underpinned these concerns. Conclusions: A qualitative analysis found barriers obstructing clinicians and patients from easily accepting e-cigarettes for harm reduction, rather than as aids to support smoking cessation: clinicians had difficulty reconciling harm reduction with their existing ethical models of practice, even following targeted training, and patients saw e-cigarettes as quitting aids.

Citation

Albury, C., Barnes, R., Ferrey, A., Coleman, T., Gilbert, H., Naughton, F., Aveyard, P., Begh, R., & MaSC study investigators. (2022). The old and familiar meets the new and unknown: patient and clinician perceptions on e-cigarettes for smoking reduction in UK general practice, a qualitative interview study. Addiction, 117(5), 1427-1437. https://doi.org/10.1111/add.15760

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 10, 2021
Online Publication Date Dec 23, 2021
Publication Date 2022-05
Deposit Date Nov 22, 2021
Publicly Available Date Dec 24, 2022
Journal Addiction
Print ISSN 0965-2140
Electronic ISSN 1360-0443
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 117
Issue 5
Pages 1427-1437
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/add.15760
Keywords e-cigarettes, smoking reduction, UK general practice, qualitative
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/6783770
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/add.15760

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