Strategies to improve smoking cessation rates in primary care

Oct 25, 2021The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Ways to help more people quit smoking in primary care

AI simplified

Abstract

Involving 112,159 participants, evidence suggests that adjunctive counseling, cost-free medications, and tailored printed materials can improve smoking cessation rates in primary care.

  • Adjunctive counseling by non-physician health professionals is associated with a 31% increased likelihood of quitting smoking.
  • Offering cost-free smoking cessation medications could lead to a 36% increase in quit rates.
  • Tailored printed materials may increase successful smoking cessation by 29% at six months or longer.
  • No clear evidence supports the effectiveness of biomedical risk feedback for increasing quit rates.
  • Provider training and incentives showed no significant improvement in smoking abstinence rates, with evidence rated as low or very low certainty.
  • There was variability in the effectiveness of multicomponent interventions due to differences in strategy combinations and study quality.

AI simplified

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • 📚7 fresh studies
  • 📝plain-language summaries
  • direct links to original studies
  • 🏅top journal indicators
  • 📅weekly delivery
  • 🧘‍♂️always free