Practice-Based Referrals to a Tobacco Cessation Quit Line: Assessing the Impact of Comparative Feedback vs General Reminders
- 1 March 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Annals of Family Medicine in Annals of Family Medicine
- Vol. 5 (2) , 135-142
- https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.650
Abstract
PURPOSE We undertook a study to assess the impact of comparative feedback vs general reminders on practice-based referrals to a tobacco cessation quit line and estimated costs for projected quit responses.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simplicity matters: Using system-level changes to encourage clinician intervention in helping tobacco users quitNicotine & Tobacco Research, 2005
- The impact of financial incentives and a patient registry on preventive care quality: increasing provider adherence to evidence-based smoking cessation practice guidelinesPreventive Medicine, 2003
- Telephone counselling for smoking cessationPublished by Wiley ,2003
- Improving Family Physicians' Use of Evidence-Based Smoking Cessation Strategies: A Cluster Randomization TrialPreventive Medicine, 2002
- Academic profiling of tobacco-related performance measures in primary careNicotine & Tobacco Research, 2002
- Randomized Controlled Trial of a Computer Strategy to Increase General Practitioner Preventive CarePreventive Medicine, 1999
- The patient exit interview as an assessment of physician-delivered smoking intervention: A validation study.Health Psychology, 1999
- Telephone counseling for smoking cessation: Effects of single-session and multiple-session interventions.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1996
- Smoking counseling and preventive medicine. A survey of internists in private practices and a health maintenance organizationArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1989
- Increasing physiciansʼ antismoking influence by applying an inexpensive feedback techniqueAcademic Medicine, 1983