Development of an online smoking cessation program for use in hospital and following discharge: Smoke-free recovery
Version 2 2023-08-08, 02:01Version 2 2023-08-08, 02:01
Version 1 2021-01-14, 12:10Version 1 2021-01-14, 12:10
journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-08, 02:01 authored by S McCrabb, Z Balogh, AL Baker, IA Harris, J Attia, N Lott, J Naylor, Christopher DoranChristopher Doran, J George, L WolfendenBackground Tobacco smoking can have negative health outcomes on recovery from surgery. Although it is recommended best practice to provide patients with advice to quit and follow-up support, provision of postdischarge support is rare. Developing an online smoking cessation program may help address this gap. Objectives This paper describes the development and pretesting of an online smoking cessation program (smoke-free recovery, SFR) tailored to the orthopaedic trauma population for use while in hospital and post-discharge. Methods Drawing on the DoTTI framework for developing an online program, the following steps were followed for program development: (1) design and development; (2) testing early iteration; (3) testing for effectiveness and (4) integration and implementation. This article describes the first two stages of SFR program development. Results SFR is a 10-module online smoking cessation program tailored for patients with orthopaedic trauma. Of the participants who completed testing early iterations, none reported any difficulties orientating themselves to the program or understanding program content. The main themes were that it was ‘helpful’, provision of ‘help to quit’ was low and SFR increased thoughts of ‘staying quit post discharge’. Conclusions This study found that a theory and evidence-based approach as the basis for an online smoking cessation program for patients with orthopaedic trauma was acceptable to users. A randomised controlled trial will be conducted to examine whether the online smoking cessation program is effective in increasing smoking cessation and how it can be integrated and implemented into hospital practice (stages three and four of the DoTTI framework). © 2017, BMJ Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
Funding
Other
History
Volume
3Issue
2Start Page
115End Page
122Number of Pages
8eISSN
2055-642XISSN
2055-8074Publisher
B M J Group, UKPublisher DOI
Full Text URL
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Acceptance Date
2017-03-07External Author Affiliations
University of New England; Hunter New England Local Health District Population Health; Monash University; University of New South Wales; Liverpool Hospital, Liverpool, New South Wales; John Hunter Hospital, New Lambton, New South Wales, Australia; University of NewcastleEra Eligible
- Yes
Journal
BMJ InnovationsUsage metrics
Categories
Licence
Exports
RefWorksRefWorks
BibTeXBibTeX
Ref. managerRef. manager
EndnoteEndnote
DataCiteDataCite
NLMNLM
DCDC