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Implementing an Inpatient Smoking Cessation Program serves as a
step-by-step manual for implementing a cost-effective tobacco
cessation program for hospitalized patients. Based on the Staying
Free program, which has evidenced among the highest cessation rates
reported in the scientific literature, this book is the result of
decades of research by the authors. Although the book reviews a
tobacco cessation program, the process is applicable to most
behavioral interventions in acute- or long-term care settings. The
book details the administrative responsibilities involved in
designing, implementing, delivering, evaluating, and maintaining an
inpatient tobacco cessation program. Its how-to approach focuses on
the skills needed to: determine the work that needs to be done,
select the appropriate interventions and providers, pay for and
market the program, and create systems to keep the program alive.
It provides algorithms for forecasting program enrollment and
information on how to budget the program. Readers can then use this
information as a blueprint for implementing their own program. A
chapter on workflow provides a "virtual tour" of what to expect
from the first 48 hours through the first year. Written in an
accessible style with insightful interviews with actual providers,
Implementing an Inpatient Smoking Cessation Program: *summarizes
the literature on tobacco use, including the causal health effects
and cost-effectiveness of cessation programs, to help readers build
a case for a program; *reviews the clinical guidelines and
advantages that support an inpatient program; and *provides tips on
how to develop an effective program including insight into where
the bottlenecks are likely to occur, and how to avoid them.
Implementing an Inpatient Smoking Cessation Program is intended for
health care administrators, providers, researchers, educators, and
students in health care administration, public health, community
and health psychology, (behavioral) medicine, nursing, respiratory
therapy, and rehabilitation.
"My sixteenth birthday will always be one of the most significant
events in my life because a door opened that summer. I began a
journey which lead me to a better understanding of myself." Kayla
Implementing an Inpatient Smoking Cessation Program serves as a
step-by-step manual for implementing a cost-effective tobacco
cessation program for hospitalized patients. Based on the Staying
Free program, which has evidenced among the highest cessation rates
reported in the scientific literature, this book is the result of
decades of research by the authors. Although the book reviews a
tobacco cessation program, the process is applicable to most
behavioral interventions in acute- or long-term care settings. The
book details the administrative responsibilities involved in
designing, implementing, delivering, evaluating, and maintaining an
inpatient tobacco cessation program. Its how-to approach focuses on
the skills needed to: determine the work that needs to be done,
select the appropriate interventions and providers, pay for and
market the program, and create systems to keep the program alive.
It provides algorithms for forecasting program enrollment and
information on how to budget the program. Readers can then use this
information as a blueprint for implementing their own program. A
chapter on workflow provides a "virtual tour" of what to expect
from the first 48 hours through the first year. Written in an
accessible style with insightful interviews with actual providers,
Implementing an Inpatient Smoking Cessation Program: *summarizes
the literature on tobacco use, including the causal health effects
and cost-effectiveness of cessation programs, to help readers build
a case for a program; *reviews the clinical guidelines and
advantages that support an inpatient program; and *provides tips on
how to develop an effective program including insight into where
the bottlenecks are likely to occur, and how to avoid them.
Implementing an Inpatient Smoking Cessation Program is intended for
health care administrators, providers, researchers, educators, and
students in health care administration, public health, community
and health psychology, (behavioral) medicine, nursing, respiratory
therapy, and rehabilitation.
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