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10 th Annual Congress TURKISH THORACIC SOCIETY Antalya, 25-29 April 2007. Tobacco: health workers and institutions. David Simpson OBE, Hon MFPHM Director, International Agency on Tobacco and Health Visiting Professor, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
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10th Annual Congress TURKISH THORACIC SOCIETY Antalya, 25-29 April 2007 Tobacco: health workers and institutions David SimpsonOBE, Hon MFPHM Director, International Agency on Tobacco and Health Visiting Professor, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Honorary Fellow, Clinical Trial Service Unit, Oxford Editor, News Analysis, Tobacco Control journal
‘British Doctors Study’ – first results published: 1954: preliminary report Doll R, Hill A B The mortality of doctors in relation to their smoking habits. A preliminary report. British Medical Journal 1954;4877:1451-1455 1954: preliminary report1956: 2nd report Lung cancer and other causes of death in relation to smoking. A second report on the mortality of British doctors. British Medical Journal 1956; 233:1071-1081
British Doctors study: prospective study of > 50 years - Started – wrote to British doctors - in 1951; - preliminary report: 1954 - 2nd report: 1956 - 50-year follow up report: 2003 Important by-products of doctors being the subjects: * doctors + first group to quit smoking; * important evidence of health gains from quitting; * made doctors press government for prevention;
UK: doctors’ reduction of smoking after publication of scientific evidence All men aged 35-59 Doctors aged 35-59 Doctors aged 60+ All men aged 60+ Source: Doll & Peto, 1976
UK: doctors health after quitting:changes in age-standardised death rates1954/59 to 1966/71 worse % change better
Doctors' % daily smoking in WHO European region WHO Europe, 2005
Potential of doctors • Doctors & other health workers are in a uniquely powerful position to fight against tobacco • In UK, • Pioneering research & early political lobbying for tobacco control was undertaken by doctors • Doctors led the way in realising that wide-ranging collaboration is required to solve the tobacco problem
Smoking cessation • Doctors & other health workers have unique ability to help smokers to stop smoking • Many smokers want to stop smoking, & others may be receptive to encouragement to stop • A brief intervention by a doctor increases chances that a smoker will successfully stop smoking • Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) can increase the success rate of more dependent smokers
The brief intervention • Offer information, advice, & encouragement to get the patient to consider making a firm commitment to quit • Reinforce the decision to quit • Give the patient a cessation leaflet, if available • If appropriate, offer to prescribe NRT or other pharmaceutical, & give advice • Advise the patient to plan a quit day in advance • At the end, reinforce the patient’s decision to quit & offer further help • inform patient of intention to follow up progress
Actions for doctors at local level • Call in teenage patients to discuss health problems including tobacco • Doctors can influence tobacco control policy at the community level • Doctors can educate politicians & other decision makers about tobacco • Many doctors have special opportunities as advisors to companies, local government & media • Doctors can influence funding to support tobacco control efforts
Doctors: role in education & training • Training in tobacco control can increase success • Exploit all opportunities: • Smoking cessation • Training medical students • Put tobacco in Continuing Medical Education (CME) & continuing professional development (CPD) courses • Media training, especially for tobacco group leaders & key representatives for news media
Increase doctors’ awareness: action for national medical organisations • Survey of doctors’ smoking habits & attitudes to smoking • Disseminate the results of the survey • Set up a tobacco group in the national office • Educate members about tobacco • Make the organisation’s premises smoke-free • Use medical publications for publicity • Brief doctors about smoking cessation • Support doctors’ cessation activities • Review organisation’s investments to eliminate tobacco holdings
Tobacco control: action for national medical organisations • Formulate a tobacco action programme • Work with other health organisations • Use the news media • Work with politicians • Campaign for smoke-free health care facilities • Influence medical education • Set up a tobacco control organisation • Prepare a baseline national tobacco report • Carry out regular surveys & evaluation
Doctors and Tobacco: Medicine’s Big ChallengeAn action manual on tobacco for medical associations and doctors An action manual on tobacco for medical associations and doctors tcrc@bma.org.uk www.tobacco-control.org http://www.doctorsandtobacco.org/
A few lessons learnt on the battlefield • Tobacco control can be tough work • At times, bravery and commitment are essential • The tobacco industry always fights effective measures • Measures it does not fight are ineffective • Eventually, you can help save more lives and prevent more disease than all your country’s clinicians
Often, politicians and others do not seem to listen Tobacco control…
It can be a long, hard, lonely journey … and there’s always someone trying to knock you down