# Effectiveness of a computer-facilitated intervention on improving provider delivery of tobacco treatment in a thoracic surgery and oncology outpatient setting: A pilot study

**Authors:** Manan M. Nayak, Emanuele Mazzola, Michael T. Jaklitsch, Jeremy E. Drehmer, Emara Nabi-Burza, Raphael Bueno, Jonathan P. Winickoff, Mary E. Cooley

PMC · DOI: 10.18332/tid/186272 · 2024-04-22

## TL;DR

A computer-based system improved how often doctors provided tobacco treatment to patients in a lung cancer and surgery clinic.

## Contribution

A low-resource computer-facilitated intervention was shown to effectively increase tobacco treatment delivery in thoracic surgery and oncology settings.

## Key findings

- 21.4% of CEASE participants were current smokers, compared to 12.4% in usual care.
- 62.5% of patients in the CEASE group received tobacco treatment, compared to 15.4% in usual care (p<0.004).
- The intervention is scalable and could be implemented more broadly in clinical settings.

## Abstract

Effective tobacco treatments are available but are often not delivered to individuals with an actual or potential diagnosis of thoracic malignancy. The specific aims of this study were to identify the prevalence of tobacco use and examine the effectiveness of the Clinical and community Effort Against Smoking and secondhand smoke Exposure (CEASE), a system-level computer-facilitated intervention, to improve provider delivery of tobacco treatment in a thoracic surgery and oncology outpatient setting.

A pre-post-test design was used to assess the effectiveness of CEASE. A 3-step approach was used to integrate tobacco treatment into routine care: ask about tobacco use, assist with cessation, and refer to a quitline. An end-of-visit survey was conducted to collect prevalence of tobacco use and delivery of tobacco treatment. Descriptive statistics and Fisher’s exact test were used for analysis.

A total of 218 individuals were enrolled; 105 participants were in usual care (UC) and 113 were in the CEASE group. Of those who enrolled, 27.6% were never smokers in UC and 27.7% in CEASE, 60% were former smokers in UC and 50% in CEASE, and 12.4% were current smokers in UC and 21.4% in CEASE. Significant differences were noted in delivery of tobacco treatment with 15.4% having received tobacco treatment in UC compared to 62.5% in CEASE (p<0.004).

A computer-facilitated intervention increased provider delivery of tobacco treatment in a thoracic surgery and oncology outpatient setting. This intervention provided a low-resource approach that has the potential to be scaled and implemented more broadly.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** thoracic malignancy (MESH:D009369), Smoking (MESH:D015208)
- **Species:** Nicotiana tabacum (American tobacco, species) [taxon 4097], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11033978