Quitline

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Quitline is a telephone helpline offering treatment for addiction and behavior change/issues. Presently most quitlines treat tobacco or alcohol addiction. Quitlines are treatment centres that offer advanced treatment and should not be confused with call centres.

Contents

Smoking cessation quitlines

Tobacco quitlines have proven to be comparable to cessation clinics in terms of proportion of smokers smoke-free at follow-up [1] [2] [3] [4] but are more cost effective. [5] A 2008 meta-analysis by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, an agency of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, found that quitline counseling increased the estimated long-run (>6 months) abstinence rate to 12.7% compared to 8.5% of smokers attempting to quit on their own; when combined with medication, the estimated long-run abstinence rate increased to 28.1% compared to 23.2% for just medication alone, a "robust effect". [6]

The treatment protocol in most tobacco cessation quitlines is a mixture of motivational interviewing, [7] behaviour therapy, and pharmacological consultation. Quitline numbers are printed on cigarette packages in several countries as a part of the health warning labels. Tobacco quitlines may offer a reactive service, meaning that counselors initiate no contact but clients signing up for support are encouraged to call the service whenever they need, or a proactive service where clients signing up for treatment are offered a call up service. [8] Many quitlines offer both reactive and proactive treatments and leave it up to the client to choose.

Alcohol quitlines

Telephone based advice (call centres) for alcoholics and their relatives are relatively common and some are gradually developing into telephone based treatment centres. However, alcohol quitlines are still in their infancy. In Sweden where telephone-based treatment for tobacco addiction is well established, an advanced alcohol treatment quitline (first of its kind) opened in January 2007. [9] The service is run in close collaboration with the Swedish national tobacco quitline. The primary aim of the Swedish alcohol quitline is to support people who are starting to lose control over their alcohol consumption to regain control. The treatment protocol is based on motivational interviewing and cognitive behavioral therapy offering support to excessive consumers of alcohol and relatives alike.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Smoking cessation</span> Process of discontinuing tobacco smoking

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nicotine replacement therapy</span> Treatment for tobacco use disorder

Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) is a medically approved way to treat people with tobacco use disorder by taking nicotine through means other than tobacco. It is used to help with quitting smoking or stopping chewing tobacco. It increases the chance of quitting tobacco smoking by about 55%. Often it is used along with other behavioral techniques. NRT has also been used to treat ulcerative colitis. Types of NRT include the adhesive patch, chewing gum, lozenges, nose spray, and inhaler. The use of multiple types of NRT at a time may increase effectiveness.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chain smoking</span> Practice of smoking several cigarettes/cigars in succession

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Ásgeir R. Helgason is an Icelandic scientist working at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden. Since 2002 he has been an associate professor in psychology at the Departments of Oncology-Pathology and Public Health at the Karolinska Institutet and Reykjavik University, Iceland.

Dr. Shu-Hong Zhu is a Chinese scientist living in the United States. He is best known for his pioneering research on the effectiveness of telephone based treatment for tobacco cessation (quitline).

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nicotine withdrawal</span> Process of withdrawing from nicotine addiction

Nicotine withdrawal is a group of symptoms that occur in the first few weeks after stopping or decreasing use of nicotine. Symptoms include intense cravings for nicotine, anger or irritability, anxiety, depression, impatience, trouble sleeping, restlessness, hunger or weight gain, and difficulty concentrating. Withdrawal symptoms make it harder to quit nicotine products, and most methods for quitting smoking involve reducing nicotine withdrawal. Quit smoking programs can make it easier to quit. Nicotine withdrawal is recognized in both the American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Statistical Manual and the WHO International Classification of Diseases.

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Elbert D. Glover is an American researcher and author in the field of tobacco addiction and smoking cessation. After several academic positions, he retired as professor emeritus at the University of Maryland at College Park School of Public Health where he served as Chairperson of the Department of Behavioral and Community Health from 2005 to his retirement in 2015. Moreover, he was entrepreneur, editor, publisher, co-founder and principal owner of Health Behavior and Policy Review, and co-founder, owner, editor, and publisher of American Journal of Health Behavior and Tobacco Regulatory Science. Glover was the founder of the American Academy of Health Behavior and served as its first president from 1997 to 2001.

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Linda Carter Sobell, Ph.D., ABPP, is the President's Distinguished Professor at Nova Southeastern University (NSU) in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. She is a professor of clinical psychology, addiction specialist, co-director of NSU's Guided Self-Change clinic, a Motivational Interviewing Trainer, and is board-certified in cognitive and behavioral psychology.

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Carolyn M. Mazure is an American psychologist and the Norma Weinberg Spungen and Joan Lebson Bildner Professor of Psychiatry and Psychology at the Yale School of Medicine. She created and directs Women’s Health Research at Yale — Yale’s interdisciplinary research center on health and gender.

Jed Eugene Rose is an American academic professor, inventor and researcher in the field of nicotine and smoking cessation. Rose is presently the President and CEO of the Rose Research Center, LLC in Raleigh, North Carolina. Additionally, he is the Director of the Duke Center for Smoking Cessation at Duke University Medical Center.

References

  1. Zhu, Shu-Hong; Melcer, Ted; Sun, Jichao; Rosbrook, Bradley; Pierce, John P (May 2000). "Smoking cessation with and without assistance: A population-based analysis". American Journal of Preventive Medicine. 18 (4): 305–11. doi:10.1016/S0749-3797(00)00124-0. PMID   10788733.
  2. Zhu, Shu-Hong; Anderson, Christopher M.; Tedeschi, Gary J.; Rosbrook, Bradley (3 October 2002). "Evidence of Real-World Effectiveness of a Telephone Quitline for Smokers" (PDF). The New England Journal of Medicine. 347 (14): 1087–93. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa020660. PMID   12362011.
  3. Helgason, AR; Tomson, T; Lund, KE; Galanti, R; Ahnve, S; Gilljam, H (September 2004). "Factors related to abstinence in a telephone helpline for smoking cessation". European Journal of Public Health. 14 (3): 306–10. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/14.3.306 . PMID   15369039.
  4. Wadland, William C.; Stoffelmayr, Bertram; Berger, Ellen; Crombach, Anna; Ives, Kathy (September 1999). "Enhancing smoking cessation rates in primary care". Journal of Family Plastic. 48 (9): 711–718. PMID   10498078 . Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  5. Tomson, T; Helgason, AR; Gilljam, H (2004). "Quitline in smoking cessation: A cost-effectiveness analysis". International Journal of Technological Assessment in Health Cate. 20 (4): 469–74. doi:10.1017/S0266462304001370. hdl: 10616/41159 . PMID   15609797. S2CID   21602691.
  6. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (May 2008). Treating tobacco use and dependence: 2008 update . Retrieved 23 January 2019.{{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  7. Lindgvist, H; Forsberg, LG; Forsberg, L; Rosendahl, I; Enebrink, P; Halgason, AR (July 2013). "Motivational interviewing in an ordinary clinical setting: a controlled clinical trial at the Swedish National Tobacco Quitline". Addictive Behaviors. 38 (7): 2321–4. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2013.03.002 . PMID   23584193.
  8. Drehmer, Jeremy E.; Hipple, Bethany; Nabi-Burza, Emara; Ossip, Deborah J.; Chang, Yuchiao; Rigotti, Nancy A.; Winickoff, Jonathan P. (24 June 2016). "Proactive enrollment of parents to tobacco quitlines in pediatric practices is associated with greater quitline use: a cross-sectional study". BMC Public Health. 16: 520. doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-3147-1 . PMC   4919852 . PMID   27342141.
  9. Ahacic, Kozma; Nederfeldt, Lena; Helgason, Asgeir R (11 July 2014). "The national alcohol helpline in Sweden: an evaluation of its first year". Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy. 9: 28. doi: 10.1186/1747-597X-9-28 . PMC   4100057 . PMID   25015403.