Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach. / Davies, Sian; Burton, Christopher; Williams, Lynne et al.
In: Health Promotion International, Vol. 35, No. 2, 04.2020, p. 244-254.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Davies, S, Burton, C, Williams, L & Tinkler, A 2020, 'Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach', Health Promotion International, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 244-254. https://doi.org/10.1093/heapro/daz020

APA

Davies, S., Burton, C., Williams, L., & Tinkler, A. (2020). Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach. Health Promotion International, 35(2), 244-254. https://doi.org/10.1093/heapro/daz020

CBE

Davies S, Burton C, Williams L, Tinkler A. 2020. Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach. Health Promotion International. 35(2):244-254. https://doi.org/10.1093/heapro/daz020

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Davies S, Burton C, Williams L, Tinkler A. Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach. Health Promotion International. 2020 Apr;35(2):244-254. Epub 2019 Mar 15. doi: 10.1093/heapro/daz020

Author

Davies, Sian ; Burton, Christopher ; Williams, Lynne et al. / Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach. In: Health Promotion International. 2020 ; Vol. 35, No. 2. pp. 244-254.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Brief smoking cessation in acute Welsh hospitals: a realist approach

AU - Davies, Sian

AU - Burton, Christopher

AU - Williams, Lynne

AU - Tinkler, Angela

PY - 2020/4

Y1 - 2020/4

N2 - moking cessation (BSC) in acute hospital settings, through exploration of organizational delivery and the role of healthcare professionals (HCPs). We used a realist approach, with embedded stakeholder engagement, within a large health organization. We conducted interviews (n = 27), a survey (n = 279) and organization documentation review (n = 44). The final programme theory suggests HCPs implement BSC when they value it as part of their role in contributing to improved patient outcomes; this is due to personal and professional influences, such as knowledge or experience. Organizational support, training and working in an environment where BSC is visible as standard care, positively influences implementation. However, the context exerts a strong influence on whether BSC is implemented, or not. HCPs make nuanced judgements on whether to implement BSC based on their assessment of the patient’s responses, the patient’s condition and other acute care demands. HCPs are less likely to implement BSC in dynamic and uncertain environments, as they are concerned about adversely impacting on the clinician–patient relationship and prioritize other acute care requirements. Organizations should actively promote BSC as a core function of the acute hospital setting and improve professional practice through leadership, training, feedback and visible indicators of organizational commitment. HCPs can be persuaded that implementing BSC is an acute care priority and an expectation of standard practice for improving patient outcomes.

AB - moking cessation (BSC) in acute hospital settings, through exploration of organizational delivery and the role of healthcare professionals (HCPs). We used a realist approach, with embedded stakeholder engagement, within a large health organization. We conducted interviews (n = 27), a survey (n = 279) and organization documentation review (n = 44). The final programme theory suggests HCPs implement BSC when they value it as part of their role in contributing to improved patient outcomes; this is due to personal and professional influences, such as knowledge or experience. Organizational support, training and working in an environment where BSC is visible as standard care, positively influences implementation. However, the context exerts a strong influence on whether BSC is implemented, or not. HCPs make nuanced judgements on whether to implement BSC based on their assessment of the patient’s responses, the patient’s condition and other acute care demands. HCPs are less likely to implement BSC in dynamic and uncertain environments, as they are concerned about adversely impacting on the clinician–patient relationship and prioritize other acute care requirements. Organizations should actively promote BSC as a core function of the acute hospital setting and improve professional practice through leadership, training, feedback and visible indicators of organizational commitment. HCPs can be persuaded that implementing BSC is an acute care priority and an expectation of standard practice for improving patient outcomes.

KW - brief smoking cessation, acute hospital, healthcare professionals, implementation, standard practice, realist evaluation

U2 - 10.1093/heapro/daz020

DO - 10.1093/heapro/daz020

M3 - Article

VL - 35

SP - 244

EP - 254

JO - Health Promotion International

JF - Health Promotion International

SN - 0957-4824

IS - 2

ER -