Reports From the Field

Clinician Telephone Training to Reduce Family Tobacco Use: Analysis of Transcribed Recordings


 

References

Some people—they don’t have insurance, so, how much it costs, they need to know that. (TN peer-to-peer)

I just know I’ve got a bunch ... Obamacare doesn’t work down here, so—I’ve still got families who don’t have any insurance, and you’re like, “Oh, I was hoping you could get something,” and they’re like, “Well, we can’t.” I have a fair number of kids who—are on some type of insurance, but the parents don’t have any coverage for NRT. (VA peer-to-peer)

While NRT is covered under the Affordable Care Act, many states have not expanded their Medicaid coverage [34]; this leaves many low-income families without access to health insurance or to free or low-cost NRT. While NRT remains one of the best and most common smoking cessation tools [35] there was no way to reassure practices that parents would be able to obtain the prescribed NRT without guaranteed coverage. In a previous study, the cost of NRT was seen by smokers as a barrier to using NRT to quit smoking [32]. Clinicians’ concerns about the cost of NRT reveal an understanding of the needs and issues relevant to their patient population.

Motivation for and Methods to Help Families Become Tobacco-Free

Clinicians and office staff were motivated to help families become tobacco-free and were interested in various ways to do so. The motivation and interest were personal, clinical, and organizational, relating to the ways in which care in the pediatric office could be altered to address tobacco in a more systematic way.

Motivation

The interest in smoking cessation stems from the desire to protect children from the harmful effects tobacco smoke and to prevent children themselves from taking up smoking:

We’d always talked about the smoking, and the parents finally quit. Probably not like I helped them—I just had been harping on them—but by that point the boy was smoking. When he was little he was like, “Oh, that’s nasty. I can’t believe my parents smoke.” Then by the time he was 14-15 and the parents actually did manage to quit, he was smoking, and I was like, “Ugh, really?” (VA peer-to-peer)

I totally understand the dire need for this project, in both the tobacco in the households, as well as the teenagers smoking. I heard one stat[istic], that one of our high schools had 80% of children using tobacco products… And that’s on my watch… I understand and I share the same passion that you do, for personal reasons, as well as reasons to help the whole community. (NC peer-to-peer)

Pediatricians saw themselves as responsible for protecting children’s health through reducing their tobacco smoke exposure, for working to prevent teen smoking, and for the overall health of their communities. Helping prevent childhood exposure to tobacco smoke and teen smoking initiation are crucial tasks for pediatricians; the 2015 AAP tobacco policy statement strongly recommends that pediatric offices include tobacco use prevention messages when talking to children and teens to help prevent smoking initiation, as well as helping families establish smoking bans for homes and cars [36]. By participating in the CEASE telephone trainings, clinicians and office staff were learning skills and tools to help them act on their motivation to protect families from the harms of tobacco.

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