BACKGROUND: New educational programs must be developed to improve physicians' skills and effectiveness in counseling patients about smoking cessation. OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of an educational program based on behavioral theory, active learning methods, and practice with standardized patients in helping patients abstain from smoking and changing physicians' counseling practices. DESIGN: Cluster randomized, controlled trial. SETTING: Two general internal medicine clinics in Switzerland. PARTICIPANTS: 35 residents and 251 consecutive smoking patients. INTERVENTION: A training program administered over two half-days, during which physicians learned to provide counseling that matched smokers' motivation to quit and practiced these ski...
Tobacco abuse is a frequent issue in general practitioners' (GPs') offices, with doctors playing a k...
Background. Medical practitioners have considerable untapped potential to assist patients in stoppin...
Introduction Studies suggest that trained physicians are about twice as likely to offer help to pati...
BACKGROUND: New educational programs must be developed to improve physicians' skills and effectivene...
BACKGROUND: Training residents in smoking cessation counseling could be part of tobacco control poli...
OBJECTIVES:A lack of physician training is a major obstacle for effective tobacco dependence treatme...
Objectives: A lack of physician training is a major obstacle for effective tobacco dependence treatm...
BACKGROUND: Cigarette smoking is one of the leading causes of preventable death world wide. There is...
Physicians can play a key role in smoking cessation but often fail to advise smokers effectively, ma...
This article describes the results of a three-hour training program that teaches residents a patient...
BACKGROUND: Early in medical education, physicians must develop competencies needed for tobacco depe...
OBJECTIVE: To determine factors that affect how much physicians trained to use a patient-centered sm...
The objective was to assess the effectiveness of a smoking cessation educational program on pediatri...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the relative impacts of three physician-delivered smoking interventions in comb...
Introduction: Despite a decline, smoking rates have remained high, especially in communities with lo...
Tobacco abuse is a frequent issue in general practitioners' (GPs') offices, with doctors playing a k...
Background. Medical practitioners have considerable untapped potential to assist patients in stoppin...
Introduction Studies suggest that trained physicians are about twice as likely to offer help to pati...
BACKGROUND: New educational programs must be developed to improve physicians' skills and effectivene...
BACKGROUND: Training residents in smoking cessation counseling could be part of tobacco control poli...
OBJECTIVES:A lack of physician training is a major obstacle for effective tobacco dependence treatme...
Objectives: A lack of physician training is a major obstacle for effective tobacco dependence treatm...
BACKGROUND: Cigarette smoking is one of the leading causes of preventable death world wide. There is...
Physicians can play a key role in smoking cessation but often fail to advise smokers effectively, ma...
This article describes the results of a three-hour training program that teaches residents a patient...
BACKGROUND: Early in medical education, physicians must develop competencies needed for tobacco depe...
OBJECTIVE: To determine factors that affect how much physicians trained to use a patient-centered sm...
The objective was to assess the effectiveness of a smoking cessation educational program on pediatri...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the relative impacts of three physician-delivered smoking interventions in comb...
Introduction: Despite a decline, smoking rates have remained high, especially in communities with lo...
Tobacco abuse is a frequent issue in general practitioners' (GPs') offices, with doctors playing a k...
Background. Medical practitioners have considerable untapped potential to assist patients in stoppin...
Introduction Studies suggest that trained physicians are about twice as likely to offer help to pati...