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Full-Text Articles in Public Health

Smoking Behaviors In Patients Offered Lung Cancer Screening, Sara Elizabeth Golden Nov 2020

Smoking Behaviors In Patients Offered Lung Cancer Screening, Sara Elizabeth Golden

Dissertations and Theses

In the United States, smoking causes preventable diseases, including lung cancer, which is the leading cause of cancer deaths. Improving smoking cessation rates is important to decrease lung cancer deaths. Health care visits with a discussion about lung cancer screening (LCS) may help in increasing prevalence of smoking cessation. Importantly, insurers now require clinicians to have a shared decision-making discussion with patients that includes discussion of smoking abstinence before they can receive an LCS scan (i.e., a low-dose computed tomography scan). This discussion may represent a unique opportunity to encourage smoking cessation since it may prompt positive smoking behavior change. …


Meta-Analysis Of Tobacco Control Policies For Reducing Tobacco Consumption, Arya Kevin Naghdi Apr 2020

Meta-Analysis Of Tobacco Control Policies For Reducing Tobacco Consumption, Arya Kevin Naghdi

University Honors Theses

The harmful effects of tobacco consumption and smoking have been well documented, and the literature is conclusive on their negative effects. However, there is still a great deal of discussion to be had on which policies and strategies can be employed to decrease smoking rates. Tobacco control policies used in the past included tobacco taxes, smoke free zones, anti-smoking media, sale to minors bans, and advertising restrictions on tobacco companies. Yet, it is still unclear which policies are most effective and least effective when it comes to reducing smoking rates. A meta-analysis of 11 articles analyzing the effects of each …


Improving Smoking Cessation Outcomes Through Tailored-Risk Patient Messages At A University Hospital Tobacco Cessation Service, David Gonzales, Wendy G. Bjornson, Catherine J. Markin, Trisha M. Coleman, Frances Favela, Noal Clemons, Caroline Koudelka, Jodi Lapidus Jan 2020

Improving Smoking Cessation Outcomes Through Tailored-Risk Patient Messages At A University Hospital Tobacco Cessation Service, David Gonzales, Wendy G. Bjornson, Catherine J. Markin, Trisha M. Coleman, Frances Favela, Noal Clemons, Caroline Koudelka, Jodi Lapidus

OHSU-PSU School of Public Health Faculty Publications and Presentations

Background: Postdischarge follow-up is a critical step for increasing effectiveness of hospital smoking cessation treatment. A quality improvement project was undertaken at an academic medical center tobacco cessation consult service to evaluate whether a tailored message (TM) linking immediate risks of continued smoking—particularly carbon monoxide exposure— to hospital recovery would stimulate more patient interest in the hospital’s cessation treatment, including agreement to postdischarge follow-up, compared to patients receiving the usual treatment protocol with a standard message (SM) regarding more general health benefits of abstinence. Methods: Data from 697 smokers ordered/referred for smoking cessation treatment in 2013 who received either the …


Tobacco Use Among Adults Initiating Treatment For Hiv Infection In Rural Uganda, Gina R. Kruse, David Bangsberg, Judith A. Hahn, Jessica E. Haberer, Peter Hunt, Conrad Muzoora, John P. Bennett, Jeffrey N. Martin, Nancy A, Rigotti Mar 2014

Tobacco Use Among Adults Initiating Treatment For Hiv Infection In Rural Uganda, Gina R. Kruse, David Bangsberg, Judith A. Hahn, Jessica E. Haberer, Peter Hunt, Conrad Muzoora, John P. Bennett, Jeffrey N. Martin, Nancy A, Rigotti

OHSU-PSU School of Public Health Faculty Publications and Presentations

We conducted a longitudinal study of tobacco use among adults initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Mbarara, Uganda where 11% of men and 3% of women use tobacco according to the 2011 Demographic and Health Survey. In a prospective cohort, self-reported tobacco use was assessed before starting ART and reassessed every 3–4 months. Plasma cotinine, a nicotine metabolite, was measured in a subset of adults pre-ART to verify self-report. Among 496 subjects, 50 (10%) reported current tobacco use (20% of men, 6% of women). Most (53%) adults with elevated cotinine levels (>15 ng/mL) reported no tobacco use. By 6 months …


Health Behaviour Changes After Diagnosis Of Chronic Illness Among Canadians Aged 50 Or Older, Jason T. Newsom, Nathalie Huguet, Pamela L. Ramage-Morin, Michael Joseph Mccarthy, Julie Bernier, Mark S. Kaplan, Bentson H. Mcfarland Nov 2012

Health Behaviour Changes After Diagnosis Of Chronic Illness Among Canadians Aged 50 Or Older, Jason T. Newsom, Nathalie Huguet, Pamela L. Ramage-Morin, Michael Joseph Mccarthy, Julie Bernier, Mark S. Kaplan, Bentson H. Mcfarland

Community Health Faculty Publications and Presentations

Changes in health behaviors (smoking, physical activity, alcohol consumption, and fruit and vegetable consumption) after diagnosis of chronic health conditions (heart disease, cancer, stroke, respiratory disease, and diabetes) were examined among Canadians aged 50 or older. Results from 12 years of longitudinal data from the Canadian National Population Health Survey indicated relatively modest changes in behavior. Although significant decreases in smoking were observed among all groups except those with respiratory disease, at least 75% of smokers did not quit. No significant changes emerged in the percentage meeting physical activity recommendations, except those with diabetes, or in excessive alcohol consumption, except …