Effectiveness of smoking cessation intervention based on the ABC Approach in patients with TB

Author:

Ohkado A.1,Querri A.1,Bermejo J.2,Bartolome R.2,Pardilla G.2,Manese D.2,Recidoro J.2,Kawatsu L.3,Garfin A.M.C.4,Bam T.S.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Clinical Research, Research Institute of Tuberculosis (RIT), Japan Anti-Tuberculosis Association (JATA), Kiyose, Japan;

2. Manila Health Department (MHD), Manila, The Philippines;

3. School of Nursing, Nagoya City University, Nagoya, Japan;

4. Department of Health, Disease Prevention and Control Bureau (DOH-DPCB), Manila, The Philippines;

5. The UNION Asia Pacific Office, Singapore

Abstract

<sec><title>SETTING</title>Urban setting in the Philippines.</sec><sec><title>OBJECTIVE</title>To assess the effectiveness of the ABC Approach developed by The Union as a tobacco-smoking cessation intervention for TB patients at a primary healthcare level in an urban setting in the Philippines.</sec><sec><title>DESIGN</title>We set up an intervention group whose patients with TB received the ABC approach and a control group of patients with TB receiving only routine health education in Manila, The Philippines. We collected smoking status and the domestic secondhand-smoking (SHS) status data from patients with TB at months 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 12. TB treatment outcome data were also collected.</sec><sec><title>RESULTS</title>Patients with TB (n = 2,174) were enrolled upon TB registration. Smoking rates were consistently low in the intervention group (3.9% vs. 8.7% at Month 6). The odds ratios of both tobacco-smoking status and domestic SHS status in the intervention group were significantly lower than those in the control group (tobacco-smoking status: P < 0.001, domestic SHS status: P < 0.01). TB treatment success rates were similar between the groups (85.0% vs. 87.3%; P = 0.201).</sec><sec><title>CONCLUSION</title>The ABC approach successfully reduced tobacco-smoking rates, maintained low domestic SHS rates and TB treatment success rates in the Philippines.</sec>

Publisher

International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease

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