BACKGROUND: Brief interventions have a modest but meaningful effect on promoting smoking cessation and reducing excessive alcohol consumption. Guidelines recommend offering such advice opportunistically and regularly but incentives vary between the two behaviours.AIM: To use representative data from the perspective of patients to compare the prevalence and characteristics of people who smoke or drink excessively and who receive a brief intervention.DESIGN AND SETTING: Data was from a representative sample of 15,252 adults from household surveys in England.METHOD: Recall of brief interventions on smoking and alcohol use, sociodemographic information, and smoking and alcohol consumption patterns were assessed among smokers and those who drink...
Background: Tobacco and alcohol use present multiplicative risk for aerodigestive cancers. Reducing ...
Background: There is a strong shared association between smoking tobacco and drinking alcohol. This ...
OBJECTIVES: Monthly changes in the prevalence of high-risk drinking and smoking in England appear to...
BACKGROUND: Brief interventions have a modest but meaningful effect on promoting smoking cessation a...
Background: Brief interventions in primary care have a modest but clinically important effect in pro...
Background Brief interventions have a modest but meaningful effect on promoting smoking cessation an...
Background: Alcohol and smoking brief interventions (BIs) in general practice have been shown to be ...
Background: Alcohol and smoking brief interventions (BIs) in general practice have been shown to be ...
Excessive drinking is a significant cause of mortality, morbidity and social problems in many countr...
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Advice from a general practitioner (GP) can encourage smokers to quit. This study a...
Abstract Background Alcohol consumption during attempts at smoking cessation can provoke relapse and...
BACKGROUND: Brief interventions have well-established small effects on alcohol consumption among haz...
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of different brief intervention strategies at reducing haza...
Background:Smoking and drinking alcohol both significantly contribute to mortality and morbidity, an...
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of different brief intervention strategies at reducing haza...
Background: Tobacco and alcohol use present multiplicative risk for aerodigestive cancers. Reducing ...
Background: There is a strong shared association between smoking tobacco and drinking alcohol. This ...
OBJECTIVES: Monthly changes in the prevalence of high-risk drinking and smoking in England appear to...
BACKGROUND: Brief interventions have a modest but meaningful effect on promoting smoking cessation a...
Background: Brief interventions in primary care have a modest but clinically important effect in pro...
Background Brief interventions have a modest but meaningful effect on promoting smoking cessation an...
Background: Alcohol and smoking brief interventions (BIs) in general practice have been shown to be ...
Background: Alcohol and smoking brief interventions (BIs) in general practice have been shown to be ...
Excessive drinking is a significant cause of mortality, morbidity and social problems in many countr...
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Advice from a general practitioner (GP) can encourage smokers to quit. This study a...
Abstract Background Alcohol consumption during attempts at smoking cessation can provoke relapse and...
BACKGROUND: Brief interventions have well-established small effects on alcohol consumption among haz...
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of different brief intervention strategies at reducing haza...
Background:Smoking and drinking alcohol both significantly contribute to mortality and morbidity, an...
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of different brief intervention strategies at reducing haza...
Background: Tobacco and alcohol use present multiplicative risk for aerodigestive cancers. Reducing ...
Background: There is a strong shared association between smoking tobacco and drinking alcohol. This ...
OBJECTIVES: Monthly changes in the prevalence of high-risk drinking and smoking in England appear to...