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Using computer-tailored smoking-cessation advice in community pharmacy: A feasibility study

Using computer-tailored smoking-cessation advice in community pharmacy: A feasibility study
Using computer-tailored smoking-cessation advice in community pharmacy: A feasibility study
Objective
Community pharmacists are in an optimal position to provide smoking-cessation services. Computer-based interventions that generate behavioural feedback materials designed to encourage and help smokers to quit can complement existing services and ensure that smoking-cessation advice is reliably delivered. This study aimed to assess the feasibility of offering a system of computer-generated individually tailored behavioural feedback for smoking cessation in community pharmacy.

Method
The setting was community pharmacies in North London. Pharmacists, already offering cessation advice routinely in the pharmacy, were trained to use a computer-based system generating a feedback report containing highly tailored behavioural advice about quitting. Pharmacists' advice was structured around the report, which was printed for the participant. Pharmacists were interviewed after recruitment ended, and participants were sent a follow-up questionnaire 4 weeks after baseline.

Key findings
Pharmacists felt they had benefited from taking part in the study and were more confident in their management of, and advice to, smokers. All agreed that the computer program was an acceptable and valuable tool to aid smoking-cessation advice in pharmacies. Eleven smokers were recruited; five completed the follow-up, four of whom reported 4-week prolonged abstinence. Reaction to the feedback report from participants was positive.

Conclusions
The feedback from both pharmacists and participants demonstrates that use of this computer system to structure and standardise delivery of smoking-cessation advice in community pharmacy is feasible and acceptable. The study suggests that the use of this system could increase pharmacists' confidence and the quality of the advice they give, leading to improved outcomes. However, a randomised controlled trial to fully evaluate the effectiveness of the system is needed.
0961-7671
365-368
Ballard (Hodges), Lisa
48a7b1af-4d2b-4ec7-8927-84361a3c62a9
Gilbert, Hazel
ac6d2ea2-4360-46f4-80b9-d1c5061dbbce
Sutton, Stephen
0da312a0-637f-47b1-9390-c0e96c1e004f
Ballard (Hodges), Lisa
48a7b1af-4d2b-4ec7-8927-84361a3c62a9
Gilbert, Hazel
ac6d2ea2-4360-46f4-80b9-d1c5061dbbce
Sutton, Stephen
0da312a0-637f-47b1-9390-c0e96c1e004f

Ballard (Hodges), Lisa, Gilbert, Hazel and Sutton, Stephen (2009) Using computer-tailored smoking-cessation advice in community pharmacy: A feasibility study. International Journal of Pharmacy Practice, 17 (6), 365-368. (doi:10.1211/ijpp.17.06.0008).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective
Community pharmacists are in an optimal position to provide smoking-cessation services. Computer-based interventions that generate behavioural feedback materials designed to encourage and help smokers to quit can complement existing services and ensure that smoking-cessation advice is reliably delivered. This study aimed to assess the feasibility of offering a system of computer-generated individually tailored behavioural feedback for smoking cessation in community pharmacy.

Method
The setting was community pharmacies in North London. Pharmacists, already offering cessation advice routinely in the pharmacy, were trained to use a computer-based system generating a feedback report containing highly tailored behavioural advice about quitting. Pharmacists' advice was structured around the report, which was printed for the participant. Pharmacists were interviewed after recruitment ended, and participants were sent a follow-up questionnaire 4 weeks after baseline.

Key findings
Pharmacists felt they had benefited from taking part in the study and were more confident in their management of, and advice to, smokers. All agreed that the computer program was an acceptable and valuable tool to aid smoking-cessation advice in pharmacies. Eleven smokers were recruited; five completed the follow-up, four of whom reported 4-week prolonged abstinence. Reaction to the feedback report from participants was positive.

Conclusions
The feedback from both pharmacists and participants demonstrates that use of this computer system to structure and standardise delivery of smoking-cessation advice in community pharmacy is feasible and acceptable. The study suggests that the use of this system could increase pharmacists' confidence and the quality of the advice they give, leading to improved outcomes. However, a randomised controlled trial to fully evaluate the effectiveness of the system is needed.

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More information

Published date: 1 December 2009
Additional Information: Copyright © 2010, Oxford University Press

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 467658
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/467658
ISSN: 0961-7671
PURE UUID: a1401ad1-da1f-4f65-8494-d324e135c2bd
ORCID for Lisa Ballard (Hodges): ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1017-4322

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Date deposited: 18 Jul 2022 18:14
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:37

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Contributors

Author: Hazel Gilbert
Author: Stephen Sutton

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