Authors
Andrew Pipe, Michelle Sorensen, Robert Reid
Publication date
2009/1/1
Journal
Patient education and counseling
Volume
74
Issue
1
Pages
118-123
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
OBJECTIVE
The smoking status of physicians can impact interactions with patients about smoking. The ‘Smoking: The Opinions of Physicians’ (STOP) survey examined whether an association existed between physician smoking status and beliefs about smoking and cessation and a physician's clinical interactions with patients relevant to smoking cessation, and perceptions of barriers to assisting with quitting.
METHODS
General and family practitioners across 16 countries were surveyed via telephone or face-to-face interviews using a convenience-sample methodology. Physician smoking status was self-reported.
RESULTS
Of 4473 physicians invited, 2836 (63%) participated in the survey, 1200 (42%) of whom were smokers. Significantly fewer smoking than non-smoking physicians volunteered that smoking was a harmful activity (64% vs 77%; P<0.001). More non-smokers agreed that smoking cessation was the …
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