Feasibility of a smoking cessation intervention for teens in the emergency department: Reach, implementation fidelity, and acceptability

TitleFeasibility of a smoking cessation intervention for teens in the emergency department: Reach, implementation fidelity, and acceptability
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsHorn, K, Dino, G, Hamilton, C, Noerachmanto, N, Zhang, J
JournalAmerican Journal of Critical Care
Volume17
Pagination205-216
PublisherAmerican Assn of Critical-Care Nurses
Place PublishedUS
Publication Languageeng
ISBN Number1062-3264
Accession Number2008-05980-002. First Author & Affiliation: Horn, Kimberly
Keywordsacceptability, Brief motivational intervention, emergency department setting, Emergency Services, Intervention, motivational interviewing, Research Setting, Smoking Cessation, Therapeutic Environment, Tobacco Smoking, tobacco smoking cessation intervention, Treatment Effectiveness Evaluation
Abstract

Background: Traditional efficacy research alone is insufficient to move interventions from research to practice. Motivational interviewing has been adapted for brief encounters in a variety of health care settings for numerous problem behaviors among adolescents and adults. Some experts suggest that motivational interviewing can support a population health approach to reach large numbers of teen smokers without the resource demands of multisession interventions. Objectives: To determine the reach, implementation fidelity, and acceptability of a brief motivational tobacco intervention for teens who had treatment in a hospital emergency department. Methods: Among 74 teens 14 to 19 years old, 40 received a brief motivational tobacco intervention and 34 received brief advice/care as usual at baseline. Followup data were collected from the interventional group at 1, 3, and 6 months and from the control group at 6 months. For the interventional group, data also were collected from the teens' parents, the health care personnel who provided the intervention, and emergency department personnel. Results: Findings indicated low levels of reach, high levels of implementation fidelity, and high levels of acceptability for teen patients, their parents, and emergency department personnel. Data suggest that practitioners can operationalize motivational interventions as planned in a clinical setting and that patients and others with an interest in the outcomes may find the interventions acceptable. However, issues of reach may hinder use of the intervention among teens in clinical settings. Conclusions: Further investigation is needed on mechanisms to reduce barriers to participation, especially barriers related to patient acuity. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract)

URLhttp://libproxy.unm.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=psyh&AN=2008-05980-002&login.asp&site=ehost-live&scope=sitekhorn@hsc.wvu.edu
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