Smokers' identity and quit advice in general practice: General practitioners need to focus more on female smokers.

Eline Meijer, Marjolein E A Verbiest,Niels H Chavannes, Ad A Kaptein,Willem J J Assendelft, Margreet Scharloo,Mathilde R Crone

Patient education and counseling(2017)

引用 11|浏览12
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摘要
OBJECTIVE:We examined smoker and non-smoker self-identities among smokers visiting their general practitioner (GP) for other reasons than smoking cessation counselling. We determined whether identity impacted on patients' appreciation of GP-initiated conversations about smoking and quit advice, and subsequent quit attempts, and examined the role of gender. METHODS:Secondary analyses of a cluster-randomised controlled trial in which baseline and 12-month follow-up data were collected among 527 daily (n=450) and non-daily smokers (n=77). RESULTS:Participants identified more with smoking than non-smoking. Participants with stronger non-smoker self-identities were more often female, appreciated the conversation about smoking more, were more likely to receive quit-advice and to have attempted to quit at 12-month follow-up. Participants with stronger smoker self-identities were also more often female, and appreciated the conversation more. Men with stronger non-smoker self-identities were more often asked about smoking and advised to quit, and appreciated the conversation more than women. CONCLUSION:Non-smoker identity was more important for receiving quit-advice, appreciation, and quit attempts than smoker identity. Future research needs to unravel why female smokers appreciated the conversation less than male smokers. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS:We suggest to incorporate an identity-component in smoking cessation interventions. GPs should increase their focus on female patients who smoke.
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