Smoking Cessation > Timeline Author: Kumanan Wilson, MD
Editorial changes - 2009-11-18
Author information and module status
Key Points
Population at Risk
Effectiveness/Harms of Counseling or Intervention on Changing Behavior
Effectiveness/Harms of Behavior Change on Clinical Outcomes
Direct Effectiveness of Intervention/Counseling on Clinical Outcomes
Timeline
Cost-Effectiveness
Patient Education
Referral/Consultation
Guidelines

Tables
References
What's New
Patient Information
Additional Resources
Tools

Quality Measures Quality Measures
Recommendation
Encourage patients to set a cessation date within 2 weeks after deciding to quit, and arrange follow-up visits to increase cessation rates and maintain smoking cessation.A

Evidence:

  • A meta-analysis of 45 studies examining person-to-person smoking cessation interventions found that persons who received four to eight treatment sessions had approximately twice the likelihood of cessation compared to individuals who received zero to one session (OR, 1.9 [CI, 1.6 to 2.2]) (1).

Comments:

  • None.

FAQs
Edward Ellerbeck, MD, MPH, editorial consultant, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. Kumanan Wilson, MD has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations.
Steven E. Weinberger, MD, FACP, Acting Editor, PIER, has stock holdings in Glaxosmithkline and Abbott.


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