Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT00679861

Smoking Interventions in General Medical Practices

Different Types of Proactive Smoking Interventions for General Medical Practices: An Implementation Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
3,215 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Medicine Greifswald · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Primary care physicians can play an important role in reducing tobacco smoking in the population. The general practice is a suitable setting for implementing proactive smoking interventions, because a large proportion of the population can be regularly reached in a favorable psychological state. Further, a trustful interpersonal relationship between the practitioners and their patients is supposed to increase the susceptibility to preventive measures. However, currently general practitioners are not capitalizing this advantage although evidence based treatments are available, which are effective and cost-effective. Outreach programs combining educational and practice-based measures have been found to be effective in engaging practitioners in screening and in giving advice. Computer expert-system and brief counseling interventions, which are based on the Transtheo-retical Model of behavior change (TTM), are promising approaches for the entire population of practitioners and smoking patients. For large scale implementation, data are needed about the degree of integration in every day routine clinical practice that could be achieved by implementing such interventions. Objectives: Evaluating different strategies for the implementation of proactive smoking interventions in general practices. Methods: In a randomized controlled trial, 150 randomly selected general practices of a defined German region will be included. The procedure comprises the implementation of 1) an on-site computer expert-system intervention, 2) a counseling intervention provided by the practitioner, or 3) the computer expert-system plus the counseling intervention. During an implementation phase of one month, two on site training sessions and support by phone will be provided. Routine use of the interventions will be monitored for the following 6 months. Main outcome measures are the number and rate of identified and treated smokers. A follow-up assessment will be realized 12 months after practice attendance to determine the smoking status of the treated smokers.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCounselling InterventionA personal counselling by the residing practitioner of up to 10 minutes. A follow-up counselling is included for the next regular patient consultation
BEHAVIORALExpert-system interventionCounselling letter of three to four pages will be generated by an expert-system base on the assessment of the patient. A second and third letter will be generated at follow-up consultations.

Timeline

Start date
2004-10-01
Primary completion
2008-08-01
Completion
2009-06-01
First posted
2008-05-19
Last updated
2008-05-19

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00679861. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.