Health worker and patient views on implementation of smoking cessation in routine tuberculosis care

Melanie Boeckmann*, Sahil Warsi, Maryam Noors, Omara Dogar, Esha Haowa Mustagfira, Fariza Firoze, Raana Zahid, Anne Readshaw, Kamran Siddiqi, Daniel Kotz, Ada Keding, Rhian Gabe, Anna Marshall, Steve Parrott, Shilpi Swami, Amina Khan, Sonia Raja, Salman Sohail, Rumana Huque, Deepa BaruaSamina Huque, Iashrat Jahan, Razia Fatima, Ejaz Qadeer, Aziz Sheikh, Helen Elsey, Jiban Karki, Eva Kralikova, Iveta Nohavova, Kamila Zvolska, Alexandra Pankova, Sushil Baral, Shophika Regmi, Prabin Shrestha, Sudeepa Khanal, Basant Joshi, TB & Tobacco Consortium

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Smoking worsens tuberculosis (TB) outcomes. Persons with TB who smoke can benefit from smoking cessation. We report findings of a multi-country qualitative process evaluation assessing barriers and facilitators to implementation of smoking cessation behaviour support in TB clinics in Bangladesh and Pakistan. We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews at five case study clinics with 35 patients and 8 health workers over a period of 11 months (2017-2018) at different time points during the intervention implementation phase. Interviews were conducted by trained researchers in the native languages, audio-recorded, transcribed into English and analysed using a combined deductive-inductive approach guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research and Theoretical Domains Framework. All patients report willingness to quit smoking and recent quit attempts. Individuals' main motivations to quit are their health and the need to financially provide for a family. Behavioural regulation such as avoiding exposure to cigarettes and social influences from friends, family and colleagues are main themes of the interviews. Most male patients do not feel shy admitting to smoking, for the sole female patient interviewee stigma was an issue. Health workers report structural characteristics such as high workload and limited time per patient as primary barriers to offering behavioural support. Self-efficacy to discuss tobacco use with women varies by health worker. Systemic barriers to implementation such as staff workload and socio-cultural barriers to cessation like gender relations, stigma or social influences should be dealt with creatively to optimize the behaviour support for sustainability and scale-up.

Original languageEnglish
Article number34
Number of pages12
Journalnpj Primary Care Respiratory Medicine
Volume29
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Sept 2019

Keywords

  • CIGARETTE-SMOKING
  • TOBACCO CESSATION
  • INTERVENTIONS

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