Smoking cessation in people with multiple sclerosis: qualitative study on the current practices and barriers for delivering assistance from the perspective of healthcare professionals in Germany
Alex Maximilian Keller, Claudia H Marck, Daniel Kotz, Barbara von Glasenapp, Christoph Heesen, Karin Riemann-Lorenz

TL;DR
This study explores how German healthcare professionals support smoking cessation for people with multiple sclerosis and identifies barriers to effective assistance.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the inconsistent practices and barriers faced by MS clinicians in promoting smoking cessation in Germany.
Findings
MS clinicians in Germany show satisfactory knowledge of smoking's negative impact on MS.
Current smoking cessation practices among clinicians vary significantly in detail and support.
Barriers include limited time, low patient motivation, and lack of resources for cessation support.
Abstract
Smoking is a well-established risk factor that exacerbates multiple sclerosis (MS) progression and increases disease activity. Smoking cessation promotion practices of MS clinicians are not meeting the needs of people with MS (pwMS). This study aimed to explore the current practices and barriers faced by MS clinicians in Germany. A qualitative study design, using semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis. Interviews with participants were held online, via telephone or face-to-face at our institute in Hamburg, Germany. We recruited eight neurologists and four MS nurses from hospitals, neurology practices and rehabilitation facilities in Germany via purposive and snowball sampling. We identified 27 codes across four themes: (1) knowledge: the 12 participants demonstrated a satisfactory general knowledge of the negative impacts of smoking on MS (2) current practice: significant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Sclerosis Research Studies · Powdery Mildew Fungal Diseases
