Journal article
“It Is A Carrot-Stick Model”: A Qualitative Study of Rural-Serving Clinician and Rural-Residing Veteran Perceptions of Requirements to Quit Smoking prior to Elective Surgery
Journal of smoking cessation, Vol.2023, 3399001
11/30/2023
DOI: 10.1155/2023/3399001
PMCID: PMC10703528
PMID: 38077280
Abstract
Introduction. Some medical centers and surgeons require patients to stop smoking cigarettes prior to elective orthopaedic surgeries in an effort to decrease surgical complications. Given higher rates of smoking among rural individuals, rural patients may be disproportionately impacted by these requirements. We assessed the perceptions and experiences of rural-residing Veterans and clinicians related to this requirement. Methods. We conducted qualitative semistructured one-on-one interviews of 26 rural-residing veterans, 10 VA orthopaedic surgery staff (from two Veterans Integrated Services Networks), 24 PCPs who serve rural veterans (14 VA; 10 non-VA), and 4 VA pharmacists. Using the knowledge, attitudes, and behavior framework, we performed conventional content analysis. Results. We found three primary themes across respondents: (1) knowledge of and the evidence base for the requirement varied widely; (2) strong personal attitudes toward the requirement; and (3) implementation and possible implications of this requirement. All surgery staff reported knowledge of requirements at their institution. VA PCPs reported knowledge of requirements but typically could not recall specifics. Most patients were unaware. The majority of respondents felt this requirement could increase motivation to quit smoking. Some PCPs felt a more thorough explanation of smoking-related complications would result in increased quit attempts. About half of all patients reported belief that the requirement was reasonable regardless of initial awareness. Respondents expressed little concern that the requirement might increase rural-urban disparities. Most PCPs and patients felt that there should be exceptions for allowing surgery, while surgical staff disagreed. Discussion. Most respondents thought elective surgery was a good motivator to quit smoking; but patients, PCPs, and surgical staff differed on whether there should be exceptions to the requirement that patients quit preoperatively. Future efforts to augment perioperative smoking cessation may benefit from improving coordination across services and educating patients more about the benefits of quitting.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- “It Is A Carrot-Stick Model”: A Qualitative Study of Rural-Serving Clinician and Rural-Residing Veteran Perceptions of Requirements to Quit Smoking prior to Elective Surgery
- Creators
- Sara E. Golden - VA Portland Health Care SystemAllison Young - VA Portland Health Care SystemChristina J. Sun - University of Colorado Anschutz Medical CampusMarissa Song Mayeda - School of MedicineOHSUPortlandORUSAohsu.eduDavid A. Katz - University of Iowa Health CareMark W. Vander Weg - Center for Access & Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE)Iowa City VA Health Care SystemIowa CityIAUSAKenneth R. Gundle - University of PortlandSteffani R. Bailey - University of Portland
- Contributors
- Deborah Ossip (Editor)
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Journal of smoking cessation, Vol.2023, 3399001
- DOI
- 10.1155/2023/3399001
- PMID
- 38077280
- PMCID
- PMC10703528
- NLM abbreviation
- J Smok Cessat
- eISSN
- 1834-2612
- Publisher
- Hindawi
- Grant note
- VRHRC-P VA Portland Health Care System Oregon Health and Science University
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 11/30/2023
- Academic Unit
- Epidemiology; Psychological and Brain Sciences; Injury Prevention Research Center; General Internal Medicine; Community and Behavioral Health; Internal Medicine
- Record Identifier
- 9984520560102771
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