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Successes and Challenges of Implementing Tobacco Dependency Treatment in Health Care Institutions in England

Agrawal, Sanjay; Mangera, Zaheer; Murray, Rachael L.; Howle, Freya; Evison, Matthew

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Authors

Sanjay Agrawal

Zaheer Mangera

Freya Howle

Matthew Evison



Abstract

There is a significant body of evidence that delivering tobacco dependency treatment within acute care hospitals can deliver high rates of tobacco abstinence and substantial benefits for both patients and the healthcare system. This evidence has driven a renewed investment in the UK healthcare service to ensure all patients admitted to hospital are provided with evidence-based interventions during admission and after discharge. An early-implementer of this new wave of hospital-based tobacco dependency treatment services is “the CURE project” in Greater Manchester, a region in the North West of England. The CURE project strives to change the culture of a hospital system, to medicalise tobacco dependency and empower front-line hospital staff to deliver an admission bundle of care, including identification of patients that smoke, provision of very brief advice (VBA), protocolised prescription of pharmacotherapy, and opt-out referral to the specialist CURE practitioners. This specialist team provides expert treatment and behaviour change support during the hospital admission and can agree a support package after discharge, with either hospital-led or community-led follow-up. The programme has shown exceptional clinical effectiveness, with 22% of all smokers admitted to hospital abstinent from tobacco at 12 weeks, and exceptional cost-effectiveness with a public value return on investment ratio of GBP 30.49 per GBP 1 invested and a cost per QALY of GBP 487. There have been many challenges in implementing this service, underpinned by the system-wide culture change and ensuring the good communication and engagement of all stakeholders across the complex networks of the tobacco control and healthcare system. The delivery of hospital-based tobacco dependency services across all NHS acute care hospitals represents a substantial step forward in the fight against the tobacco epidemic.

Citation

Agrawal, S., Mangera, Z., Murray, R. L., Howle, F., & Evison, M. (2022). Successes and Challenges of Implementing Tobacco Dependency Treatment in Health Care Institutions in England. Current Oncology, 29(5), 3738-3747. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29050299

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 17, 2022
Online Publication Date May 20, 2022
Publication Date May 20, 2022
Deposit Date May 30, 2022
Publicly Available Date May 30, 2022
Journal Current Oncology
Print ISSN 1718-7729
Electronic ISSN 1718-7729
Publisher MDPI AG
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 29
Issue 5
Pages 3738-3747
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29050299
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/8138759
Publisher URL https://www.mdpi.com/1718-7729/29/5/299

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