Ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use

Abstract Tobacco use is a chronic relapsing disease, and remains the leading cause of preventable death in much of the world. Increasingly, tobacco use, chiefly cigarette smoking, is being framed as a chronic disease, with periods of use and periods of abstinence. An implicit component of this conce...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Steven L. Bernstein, Benjamin A. Toll
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-09-01
Series:Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-019-0159-z
id doaj-505d5fdc0ba94e0aa662580c68badfff
record_format Article
spelling doaj-505d5fdc0ba94e0aa662580c68badfff2020-11-25T02:43:33ZengBMCAddiction Science & Clinical Practice1940-06402019-09-011411410.1186/s13722-019-0159-zAsk about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco useSteven L. Bernstein0Benjamin A. Toll1Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale School of MedicineDepartment of Public Health Sciences, Medical University of South CarolinaAbstract Tobacco use is a chronic relapsing disease, and remains the leading cause of preventable death in much of the world. Increasingly, tobacco use, chiefly cigarette smoking, is being framed as a chronic disease, with periods of use and periods of abstinence. An implicit component of this conceptualization is that treatment—both counseling and pharmacotherapy—may be needed at various intervals for extended periods of time, perhaps over an individual’s lifetime. This would mirror the treatment of other chronic conditions, such as diabetes, hypertension, or hyperlipidemia. Yet, clinical trials of tobacco dependence treatment still generally model outcome measures in terms of cessation, abstinence, or quitting, measured at discrete time points. This reinforces the notion that smoking, or tobacco dependence, is a dichotomous condition, and that one is either “cured,” or not. Although the goal of treating tobacco dependence is to ensure long-term abstinence (i.e. “quitting”), this model is discordant with clinical reality, in which of periods of tobacco use are interspersed with periods of abstinence. Hence, the goal of treatment is to lengthen the duration of the latter, while shortening the duration of the former. In the clinical arena, this dichotomous model of tobacco use is reflected in electronic health records, where smoking is generally categorized as current, former, or never. We propose that clinicians move away from the dichotomous categorization of tobacco use, and adopt methods used to categorize the status of other chronic conditions. Specifically, biomarkers such as carbon monoxide, cotinine, and anabasine, measured at regular intervals, can provide clinicians with much clearer, clinically relevant and actionable assessments of current tobacco use by their patients. This can be done without making reference to dichotomous states such as current or former use of tobacco. In psychological terms, one can frame tobacco use in terms of states, attributes in specific situations at discrete moments in time, rather than the more durable traits.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-019-0159-zSmoking cessationTobacco dependenceChronic disease
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steven L. Bernstein
Benjamin A. Toll
spellingShingle Steven L. Bernstein
Benjamin A. Toll
Ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Smoking cessation
Tobacco dependence
Chronic disease
author_facet Steven L. Bernstein
Benjamin A. Toll
author_sort Steven L. Bernstein
title Ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use
title_short Ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use
title_full Ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use
title_fullStr Ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use
title_full_unstemmed Ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use
title_sort ask about smoking, not quitting: a chronic disease approach to assessing and treating tobacco use
publisher BMC
series Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
issn 1940-0640
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Tobacco use is a chronic relapsing disease, and remains the leading cause of preventable death in much of the world. Increasingly, tobacco use, chiefly cigarette smoking, is being framed as a chronic disease, with periods of use and periods of abstinence. An implicit component of this conceptualization is that treatment—both counseling and pharmacotherapy—may be needed at various intervals for extended periods of time, perhaps over an individual’s lifetime. This would mirror the treatment of other chronic conditions, such as diabetes, hypertension, or hyperlipidemia. Yet, clinical trials of tobacco dependence treatment still generally model outcome measures in terms of cessation, abstinence, or quitting, measured at discrete time points. This reinforces the notion that smoking, or tobacco dependence, is a dichotomous condition, and that one is either “cured,” or not. Although the goal of treating tobacco dependence is to ensure long-term abstinence (i.e. “quitting”), this model is discordant with clinical reality, in which of periods of tobacco use are interspersed with periods of abstinence. Hence, the goal of treatment is to lengthen the duration of the latter, while shortening the duration of the former. In the clinical arena, this dichotomous model of tobacco use is reflected in electronic health records, where smoking is generally categorized as current, former, or never. We propose that clinicians move away from the dichotomous categorization of tobacco use, and adopt methods used to categorize the status of other chronic conditions. Specifically, biomarkers such as carbon monoxide, cotinine, and anabasine, measured at regular intervals, can provide clinicians with much clearer, clinically relevant and actionable assessments of current tobacco use by their patients. This can be done without making reference to dichotomous states such as current or former use of tobacco. In psychological terms, one can frame tobacco use in terms of states, attributes in specific situations at discrete moments in time, rather than the more durable traits.
topic Smoking cessation
Tobacco dependence
Chronic disease
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-019-0159-z
work_keys_str_mv AT stevenlbernstein askaboutsmokingnotquittingachronicdiseaseapproachtoassessingandtreatingtobaccouse
AT benjaminatoll askaboutsmokingnotquittingachronicdiseaseapproachtoassessingandtreatingtobaccouse
_version_ 1724768542304239616