Clinician Telephone Training to Reduce Family Tobacco Use: Analysis of Transcribed Recordings
Conclusion
The training call data revealed both the concerns as well as the interests of child health care clinicians in regard to addressing family tobacco use. While the majority of clinicians and office staff were interested and enthusiastic about helping families become tobacco free, they expressed concerns that could threaten full implementation of family tobacco control strategies. These concerns and interests related to the coverage and affordability of NRT, integrating tobacco control strategies into the practice flow, and learning strategies to address family-wide tobacco use, such as helping grandparents quit smoking or addressing tobacco use with those who were not native English speakers. The concerns and interests of clinicians and office staff revealed that they were genuinely interested in learning ways to tailor strategies to address tobacco use for their practices and patient populations. By recording the training calls, the study team was better able to help them tailor the intervention to their practice, both during the calls and during subsequent implementation by providing new materials and additional information on subjects of concern to the practice. Carefully documenting training calls with health care practices are an ideal opportunity to collect information on issues that may impact full implementation of future interventions.
Corresponding author: Jonathan P. Winickoff, jwinickoff@mgh.harvard.edu