Authors
Katie Myers, Peter Hajek, Charles Hinds, Hayden McRobbie
Publication date
2011/6/13
Source
Archives of internal medicine
Volume
171
Issue
11
Pages
983-989
Publisher
American Medical Association
Description
Objective: To examine existing smoking studies that compare surgical patients who have recently quit smoking with those who continue to smoke to provide an evidence-based recommendation for front-line staff. Concerns have been expressed that stopping smoking within 8 weeks before surgery may be detrimental to postoperative outcomes. This has generated considerable uncertainty even in health care systems that consider smoking cessation advice in the hospital setting an important priority. Smokers who stop smoking shortly before surgery (recent quitters) have been reported to have worse surgical outcomes than early quitters, but this may indicate only that recent quitting is less beneficial than early quitting, not that it is risky.
Design: Systematic review with meta-analysis.
Data Sources: British Nursing Index (BNI), The Cochrane Library database, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature …
Total citations
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