Physician-brief advice for promoting smoking cessation among cancer patients on treatment in low and middle-income countries : a scoping review
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Date
Authors
Ilesanmi, Olayinka Stephen
Faseru, Babalola
Afolabi, Aanuoluwapo Adeyimika
Odukoya, Olukemi
Ayo-Yusuf, Olalekan Abdulwahab
Akinsolu, Folahanmi
Adebiyi, Akindele Olupelumi
Evans, William K.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Physician-brief advice has been utilized in high-income countries to promote smoking cessation among cancer patients. Empirical evidence on its effectiveness among cancer patients in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) is lacking. The gap could be due to inadequate training, and competing healthcare priorities, leading to insufficient implementation of targeted smoking cessation interventions in oncology settings. We undertook this scoping review to determine if physician-brief advice is effective in promoting smoking cessation among cancer patients in LMICs.
METHODS: We conducted a literature search of all relevant articles across five databases: Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Cochrane Library (Tobacco Addiction Group trials), World Conference on Lung Cancer proceedings, PubMed, and Google Scholar up to November 2023, using pre-defined inclusion criteria and keywords. The study population was cancer survivors in LMICs, the intervention was smoking cessation advice by a physician in a clinic or oncology center during a consultation, and the outcome was the effect of smoking cessation programs in discontinuing smoking among cancer survivors in LMICs.
RESULTS: Overall, out of every 10 cancer patients in LMICs, about seven were smokers, and one-half had received physician-brief advice for smoking cessation. Physician-brief advice was more likely to be delivered to patients with smoking-related cancer (Cohen’s d = 0.396). This means that there is a noticeable difference between patients with smoking-related cancer compared to those with cancer unrelated to smoking. Smoking cessation failure was due to the inability to cope with the symptoms of withdrawal, missed smoking cessation clinic visits, mental health disorders, limited time and resources, and minimal patient-physician contact.
CONCLUSION: There is very little literature on the frequency of use or the efficacy of physician-brief advice on smoking cessation in LMICs. The literature suggests that cancer patients in LMICs have low self-efficacy to quit smoking, and smoking cessation is rarely part of cancer care in LMICs. Physicians in LMICs should be trained to use motivational messages and good counseling techniques to improve smoking cessation among cancer patients. Policymakers should allocate the resources to implement physician-brief advice and design training programs for physicians focusing on physician-brief advice tailored to cancer patients.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT: All data generated or analyzed during this study are available upon reasonable request from the corresponding author.
Keywords
Physicians, Physician-brief advice, Smoking, Smoking cessation, Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), SDG-03: Good health and well-being
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being
Citation
Ilesanmi, O.S., Faseru, B., Afolabi, A.A. et al. Physician-brief advice for promoting smoking cessation among cancer patients on treatment in low and middle-income countries: a scoping review. BMC Cancer 24, 149 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-024-11872-z.
