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Here’s how to help Black smokers quit


 

Tailoring treatment to Black smokers

Considering the unique challenges Black patients may face in quitting, clinicians should provide more follow-up and consistent support, according to Dr. Adamian. The higher risk of tobacco-related death among Black smokers means clinicians need to be more aggressive in recommending every treatment possible if one treatment fails.

Pharmacotherapy, nicotine replacement therapy, and counseling are evidence-based options to help patients stop smoking.

Dr. Kortsch considers pharmacotherapy to be the most effective and evidence-based treatment for nicotine addiction. However, Black Americans are less likely than White smokers to try smoking cessation medications, and they express more suspicion about efficacy and potential addiction to the tools.

“African American populations simply do not use pharmacotherapy to the extent that other populations do to help them quit smoking; this is a problem,” Dr. Kortsch said.

Dr. Kortsch recommends the use of varenicline for all patients with nicotine addiction. He recommends varenicline in combination with tobacco replacement products such as lozenges, patches, gums, or inhalers if the patient is a heavy smoker as opposed to someone who has a few cigarettes on the weekends.

If a patient has anxiety or depression, Dr. Adamian advises initiating a pharmacologic treatment such as bupropion or varenicline more quickly, because mood disorders can hinder cessation.

Cessation counseling is another option, but clinicians may need to more thoroughly explain what it entails. According to Dr. Choi, Black patients may be more reluctant to try cessation counseling because of the negative stigma associated with the term “counseling.” But this treatment is not therapy – it involves identifying and coming up with strategies to manage smoking triggers and providing encouragement. Clinicians can eliminate any confusion patients may have between psychological therapy and cessation counseling.

“ ‘Counseling’ tends to have a somewhat negative connotation among racial minority populations, like you go to counseling because you’re crazy,” Dr. Choi said. “That needs to change.”

Clinicians also must clarify how each cessation tool works. For example, some patients may not realize that the nicotine patch isn’t an instant fix for a craving and that hours may pass before the user feels its effects, according to Dr. Choi.

Move past the ‘advise’ stage

While recommending to patients various forms of cessation, clinicians should be mindful of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force’s guidelines for providers who treat patients who smoke. Those guidelines include a five-step process: Ask, Advise, Assess, Assist, and Arrange.

Dr. Choi said most providers stop at the “Advise” stage. In steps one and two, providers ask patients whether they smoke, then advise them to quit. Stage three involves asking whether or not a patient is ready to quit and where they are in their journey.

Clinicians shouldn’t give up when patients say they do not currently plan to quit. Instead, they can use the conversation to create an ongoing dialogue about the patient’s readiness to quit in future visits. Follow-up phone calls or text messages should be made 2-4 weeks after a patient makes an attempt to quit and at the same interval thereafter, Dr. Adamian advised.

“It takes a concerted effort on behalf of all people to be successful, and it is really uncommon for someone to be successful with only one attempt,” Dr. Kortsch said.

In a recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers identified three key factors that influence a Black smoker’s ability to stop smoking in early attempts. These factors have been shown to increase the chances of long-term cessation: fewer cigarettes per day, nonuse of other tobacco products, and lower levels of cotinine (a nicotine metabolite) at baseline.

“Using these predictors of early treatment response could allow providers to anticipate which smokers may benefit from a minimal, low-cost intervention and who may benefit from more intensive treatment,” said Eleanor Leavens, PhD, assistant professor in the department of population health at the University of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City, who led the study.

Dr. Leavens’ research also confirmed that early abstinence predicts long-term cessation success. Smokers who were able to forgo cigarettes within 2 weeks of their quit date were almost four times more likely to remain abstinent over the long term.

A quick phone call or message from the clinician or a staff member can help patients achieve early progress, enable changes in approach to quitting, and build a relationship with the patient, Dr. Adamian said.

“Have more empathy for what Black patients are going through,” Dr. Choi said. “Continue to cheer them on and to be a supporter of their smoking cessation journey.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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