Community nurses are well placed to address smoking behaviour with older people. Smoking cessation can significantly improve the health and wellbeing of older people, and to withhold support for smoking cessation is a form of age discrimination. This paper provides advice to community nurses about how to approach discussions about smoking behaviour with older clients as part of their health education practice. It addresses some of the ethical concerns that have been raised by community nurses, explains how smoking in older people may be reduced using a harm reduction approach and through working with the concept of the smoke-free home
Research highlights that asset-based community development where local residents become equal partne...
Aim. The aim of the study was to assess smoking behaviour of nurses including; (1) smoking prevalenc...
Secondhand smoke (SHS) is the third leading cause of preventable death in the United States and a ma...
Community nurses are well placed to address smoking behaviour with older people. Smoking cessation c...
Community nurses are well placed to address smoking behaviour with older people. Smoking cessation c...
Tobacco smoking continues to pose negative health consequences for smokers and their families, and i...
Tobacco smoking continues to pose negative health consequences for smokers and their families, and i...
Primary care nurses are ideally placed to address smoking cessation with their clients who smoke, pl...
Background: Smoking remains the largest single cause of preventable mortality. In rural Australia wh...
AIM: To examine the smoking behaviour, knowledge and attitudes of nurses, their willingness to provi...
BACKGROUND: The benefits of smoking cessation among older people are well documented. Despite this, ...
Globally tobacco use and exposure to tobacco smoke represent some of the greatest risk factors for m...
Globally tobacco use and exposure to tobacco smoke represent some of the greatest risk factors for m...
Abstract Background In the last 20 years, interest into research around nurses who smoke has flouris...
Tobacco is known to be a major cause of preventable deaths in New Zealand and is established as the ...
Research highlights that asset-based community development where local residents become equal partne...
Aim. The aim of the study was to assess smoking behaviour of nurses including; (1) smoking prevalenc...
Secondhand smoke (SHS) is the third leading cause of preventable death in the United States and a ma...
Community nurses are well placed to address smoking behaviour with older people. Smoking cessation c...
Community nurses are well placed to address smoking behaviour with older people. Smoking cessation c...
Tobacco smoking continues to pose negative health consequences for smokers and their families, and i...
Tobacco smoking continues to pose negative health consequences for smokers and their families, and i...
Primary care nurses are ideally placed to address smoking cessation with their clients who smoke, pl...
Background: Smoking remains the largest single cause of preventable mortality. In rural Australia wh...
AIM: To examine the smoking behaviour, knowledge and attitudes of nurses, their willingness to provi...
BACKGROUND: The benefits of smoking cessation among older people are well documented. Despite this, ...
Globally tobacco use and exposure to tobacco smoke represent some of the greatest risk factors for m...
Globally tobacco use and exposure to tobacco smoke represent some of the greatest risk factors for m...
Abstract Background In the last 20 years, interest into research around nurses who smoke has flouris...
Tobacco is known to be a major cause of preventable deaths in New Zealand and is established as the ...
Research highlights that asset-based community development where local residents become equal partne...
Aim. The aim of the study was to assess smoking behaviour of nurses including; (1) smoking prevalenc...
Secondhand smoke (SHS) is the third leading cause of preventable death in the United States and a ma...