At a glance
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Primary Care-based Patient Navigation to Promote Smoking Cessation Treatment: a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Enhanced Traditional Care control and Patient navigation for Cigarette Smoking. Completed, enrolled 47 participants.
Detailed Summary
Cigarette smoking is a highly significant health threat, responsible for more than 430,000 deaths each year. Low-income persons and racial/ethnic minorities are at particularly high risk, smoking at greater rates and having greater tobacco-related morbidity and mortality than other persons. Yet poor and minority smokers are less likely to receive advice to stop smoking or to use tobacco cessation services. Using non-physician members of the health care team as patient navigators to connect low-income and minority smokers to evidence-based tobacco treatment services is a promising approach because 1) many primary care providers (PCPs) are unable to provide counseling to patients who smoke due to time constraints; 2) minority patients may be less aware of smoking cessation resources and may have misconceptions about tobacco dependence treatments; and 3) as primary care practices are redesigned as medical homes, non-physician members of the health care team will increasingly be taking on tasks previously performed by PCPs. Patient navigators are lay persons from the community, working as paid employees, who are trained to guide patients through the health care system to receive services. Information on the efficacy of patient navigation to connect vulnerable patients to smoking cessation services is needed. The investigators will implement a patient navigation-based intervention in the primary care setting to promote engagement of low-income and minority patients in smoking cessation treatment. To test our intervention, the investigators will conduct a pilot randomized control trial (RCT), randomizing 240 patients to the intervention condition (patient navigation) or an enhanced traditional care (ETC) control condition. The investigators will perform follow-up at three months following the start of the intervention, with a primary outcome of engagement in smoking cessation treatment.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Educational brochure, list of hospital and community resources
Patients will receive up to 4 hours of patient navigation, in person or over the phone, over a 3-month period.