Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T12:13:48.308Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Current Trends and Impact of Smoking Cessation Interventions for Adult Smokers in Low and Middle Income Countries: A Systematic Literature Review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 June 2014

Olusegun Owotomo*
Affiliation:
Graduate student, Department of Health Promotion and Community Health Sciences, Texas A&M Health Science Center School of Public Health, College Station, Texas, USA.
*
Address for correspondence: Department of Health Promotion and Community Health Sciences, Texas A&M Health Science Center School of Public Health, College Station, Texas, USA. [email protected]

Abstract

Objective: This study aims to systematically review the existing literature on the current developments and impact of smoking cessation interventions targeted toward adult smokers in low and middle income countries (LMICs).

Methods: Major databases were searched with the following selection criteria: (1) studies based on empirical findings that demonstrate the impact of smoking cessation interventions in LMICs; (2) studies conducted in or focused on LMICs; (3) studies targeted at the adult smoking population; (4) studies focused on smoking cessation component of tobacco control; (5) studies that reported on the capacity for smoking cessation intervention and current developments in LMICs; (6) published in peer review journals between 2003 and April, 2013; (7) studies written or transcribed in English.

Results: A total of 23 articles (23 studies) were included in the review. Six studies assessed the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of smoking cessation intervention types in some LMICs. Four studies explored the reach, adoption and institutionalisation of cessation interventions. Six studies assessed physicians’ capacity to provide cessation interventions, and seven studies provided insights on current developments.

Conclusion: Smoking cessation interventions are not readily available and affordable in LMICs. Extensive research is needed to determine the most cost-effective and culturally appropriate smoking cessation interventions for adult smokers in LMICs.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Australian Academic Press Pty Ltd 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ali, A. Y., Safwat, T., Onyemelukwe, G., Otaibi, M. A., Amir, A. A., Nawas, Y. N., Aouina, H., & Bolliger, C. T. (2012). Smoking prevention and cessation in Africa and Middle-East region: A consensus draft guideline for healthcare providers- executive summary. Respiration, 2012 (83), 423432.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bitton, A. & Eyal, N. (2011). Too poor to treat? The complex ethics of cost-effective tobacco policy in the developing world. Public Health Ethics, 4 (2), 109120.Google Scholar
Chapman, S. & Mackenzie, R. (2012). Can it be ethical to apply limited resources in low-income countries to ineffective low-reach smoking cessation strategies? A reply to Bitton and Eyal. Public Health Ethics, 5 (1) 2937.Google Scholar
Dozier, A. M., Ossip-Klein, D. J., Diaz, S., Chin, N. P., Sierra, E., Quinones, Z., . . . Armstrong, L. (2006). Tobacco use in the Dominican Republic: Understanding the culture first. Tobacco Control, 15 (Suppl), i3036. Doi:10.1136/tc.2005.014852.Google Scholar
Gilbert, A. R., Pinget, C., Bovet, P., Cornuz, J., Shamlaye, C., & Paccaud, F. (2004). The cost effectiveness of pharmacological smoking cessation therapies in developing countries: a case study in the Seychelles. Tobacco Control, 2004 (13), 190195.Google Scholar
Glasgow, R. E., McKay, H. G., Piette, J. D., & Reynolds, K. D. (2001). The RE-AIM framework for evaluating intervention: what can it tell us about approaches to chronic illness management? Patient Education and Counseling, 44 (22), 119127.Google Scholar
Gong, J., Zhang, Z., Zhu, Z., Wan, J., Yang, N., Li, F., Sun, H., & Chen, X. (2012). Cigarette smoking and anti-smoking counseling practices among physicians in Wuhan, China. Health Education, 112 (4), 319332.Google Scholar
Joshi, U., Modi, B., & Yadav, S. (2010). A study on prevalence of chewing form of tobacco and existing quitting patterns in urban population of Jamnagar, Gujarat. Indian Journal of Community Medicine, 35 (1), 105108.Google Scholar
Heydari, G., Talischi, F., Mojgani, N., Masjedi, M. R., Algouhmani, H., Lando, H. A., & Ahmady, A. E. (2012). Status and cost of smoking cessation in countries of East Mediterranean region. East Mediterranean Health Journal, 18 (11).Google Scholar
Higashi, H. & Barendregt, J. J. (2011). Cost-effectiveness of tobacco control policies in Vietnam: the case of personal smoking cessation support. Addiction, (107), 658670.Google Scholar
Jeremias, E., Chatkin, J. M., Chatkin, G., Seibert, J., Martins, M., & Wagner, M. (2012). Smoking cessation in older adults. The International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, 16 (2), 273278.Google Scholar
Lee, A., Siddiqi, K., Khan, M. A., Ahmed, M., Shafiq-Ur-Rehman, M., Shams, N., & Nazir, A. E. (2010). Local determinants of tobacco use in Pakistan and the importance of context. Journal of Smoking Cessation, 5 (02), 145150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, H. Z., Sun, H., Liu, Z., Zhang, Y., & Cheng, Q. (2007). Cigarette smoking and anti-smoking counselling: dilemmas of Chinese physicians. Health Education, 107 (2), 192207.Google Scholar
McRobbie, H., Raw, M., & Chan, S. (2013). Research priorities for article 14- demand reduction measures concerning tobacco dependence and cessation. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 15 (4), 805816.Google Scholar
Merill, R., Harmon, T., & Gagon, H. (2009). Physician-based tobacco smoking cessation counseling in Belgrade, Serbia. International Electronic Journal of Health Education, 2009 (12), 4858.Google Scholar
Muller, F. & Wehbe, L. (2008). Smoking and smoking cessation in Latin America: a review of current situation and available treatments. International Journal of COPD, 3 (2), 283293.Google Scholar
Nichter, M., Nichter, M., Muramoto, M., & Project Quit Tobacco International, (2010). Project Quit Tobacco International: Laying the groundwork for tobacco cessation in low-and middle-income countries. Asia-Pacific Journal of Public Health, 22 (3), 181S188S.Google Scholar
Ontario Medical Advisory Secretariat. (2010). Population-based smoking cessation strategies: A summary of a select group of evidence-based reviews. Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series, 10 (1), 2027.Google Scholar
Panda, R. & Jena, P. K. (2013). Examining physicians’ preparedness for tobacco cessation services in India: Findings from primary care public health facilities in two Indian States. Australasian Medical Journal, 6 (2), 115121.Google Scholar
Pine-Abata, H., McNeill, A., Murray, R., Bitton, A., Rigotti, N., & Raw, M. (2012). A survey of tobacco dependence treatment services in 121 countries. Addiction, doi:10.1111/add.12172.Google Scholar
Raw, M., McNeill, A., & Murray, R. (2010). Case studies of tobacco dependence treatment in Brazil, England, India, South Africa and Uruguay. Addiction, (105), 1721–1728.Google Scholar
Srivastava, S., Malhotra, S., Harries, A. D., Lal, P., Arora, M. (2013). Correlates of tobacco quit attempts and cessation in the adult population of India: Secondary analysis of Global Adult Tobacco Survey, 2009–2010. BMC Public Health, 13, 263. doi:10.1186/1471-2458-13-263.Google Scholar
The World Bank, (2013). Country and lending groups. Retrieved from website: http://data.worldbank.org/about/country-classifications/country-and-lending-groups Google Scholar
Vanphanom, S. A., Morrow, M., Phengsavanh, A., Hansana, V., Phommachanh, S., & Tomson, T. (2011). Smoking among Lao medical doctors: challenges and opportunities for tobacco control. Tobacco Control, 2012 (20), 144150.Google Scholar
Ward, K.D., Asfar, T., Al Ali, R., Rastam, S., Vander Weg, M.W., Eissenberg, T., & Maziak, W. (2012). Randomized trial of the effectiveness of combined behavioral/pharmacological smoking cessation treatment in Syrian primary care clinics. Addiction, (108), 394–403.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (WHO), (2005). WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Retrieved from website: http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications Google Scholar
Zhou, J., Abdullah, A. S., Pun, V. C., Huang, D., Lu, S., & Luo, S. (2010). Smoking status and cessation counseling practices among physicians, Guangxi, China, 2007. Preventing Chronic Disease, 7 (1), 110.Google ScholarPubMed
Zhu, W. H., Yang, L., Jiang, C. Q., Deng, L. Z., Lam, T. H., Zhang, J. Y., & Chan, S. C. (2009). Characteristics of smokers and predictors of quitting in a smoking cessation clinic in Guangzhou, China. Journal of Public Health, 32 (2), 267276.Google Scholar