Experiences of Working with the Tobacco Issue in the Context of Health Promoting Hospitals and Health Services: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants and Data Collection
2.3. Analysis
2.4. Ethical Issues
3. Findings
3.1. Overall Experiences of Working with Tobacco Issues (Table 1)
3.1.1. General experiences
3.1.2. Facilitators
3.1.3. Barriers
3.2. Experiences of Working with “Free from Tobacco in Connection with Surgery” (Table 2)
3.2.1. General experiences
3.2.2. Facilitators
3.2.3. Barriers
3.3. Experiences of Work in the HPH Tobacco Task Force (Table 3)
3.3.1. General experiences
3.3.2. Possibilities
3.3.3. Challenges
4. Discussion
4.1. Methodological Considerations
4.2. Findings
4.2.1. Evidence
4.2.2. Context
4.2.3. Facilitation
4.2.4. Adopters
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References
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Category | Subcategory | Quotation |
---|---|---|
General experiences | Development over time | I believe it has become more accepted that … health is also our concern …. not just curing diseases and such … (IV, group 2) |
Responsibility | … open care units work more with primary prevention than hospitals, but not everything can be left to open care units just because of that, so it’s a matter of putting it on a hospital level as well (III, group 2) | |
Vision | … that our grandchildren shall be born into a tobacco-free society (IV, group 3) | |
Evidence base | … it’s seldom that there is so much unequivocally clear evidence for … how good it is (VII, group 2) There’s so much evidence for working with tobacco issues, … that … no one questions it (I, group 1) It’s still remarkable that … the Swedish medical profession … that is so, that demands so much evidence, but still finds it so terribly difficult … to comply… it’s grotesque and embarrassing that it’s so difficult and sometimes one feels that this evidence, ah … the demand for it is a constant obstacle … (I, group 2) | |
Facilitators | Support | … if the management is with us, then it’s much easier (IV, group 3) … we now have a county council director interested in prevention … we’ve missed that for many years. Such things also make a difference (II, group 1) |
Policy documents | … and if you have a policy and a decision on how to implement this then you can, then it’s no problem for there are no obstacles … then it’s just to solve the problems (IV, group 3) And getting it, just as you say, getting it into the health care agreement. That this is something basic, that must get done! (II, group 1) | |
Incentives | And if … auditors then discover that the hospital directors or hospital… here … don’t do the job … then there will be a reprimand from the auditors (I, group 2) But it feels wrong … in some way, so that it’s … it’s much easier if you can get people to work with you rather than forcing them to work with it (I, group 1) And by putting their name on the employment contract, they are also committed to follow … ah laws, regulations, policies … and … uh … ask them if they are aware of what can happen if they don’t do this [such as personnel not following the hospitals smoke-free policy] … and that, that I say that they have to see this as, as a verbal warning that they are absolutely forbidden to do this and they’d better follow this … next step is a written warning which can gradually lead to getting fired (VI, group 3) | |
Marketing | It’s when you say this with headings, that yes, with the entire concept of “good care”, to use those headings and use them as well (VI, group 2) | |
Follow-up | The hospital hasn’t followed up the numerical values, and it’s important to get them into … eh, the budget and the long-term plan (III, group 2) It can be written in the agreement that it is to be carried out, but if it is not followed up and evaluated, then it will not get done … what can I say, it won’t be carried out in the manner conceived (II, group 1) | |
Barriers | Leadership | … it is primarily a question of management, I think that keeping the personnel smoke-free depends heavily on the head of the ward … if that person smokes then it’s immediately difficult … (IV, group 2) … as a matter of principle the manager feels that these things have no place at all at the hospital but should be dealt with in primary care. So he says categorically no, despite the fact that he has an organization that works correctly and properly. That’s also the way it can be (II, group 1) |
Lack of knowledge | I don’t believe that knowledge is as widespread among … our colleagues as we believe … (VIII, group 2) | |
Structure | But I feel that we still need to structure our work … especially at the hospital, I think (I, group 1) | |
Medical record system | But it’s also remarkable that in our extensive medical records system […] that you cannot perform a free text search (V, group 2) | |
Inertia | But it, it is sluggish … very sluggish in [name of town], it’s a big hospital … and to get them to care about this small part is … (V, group 3) |
Category | Subcategory | Quotation |
---|---|---|
General experiences | Development over time | That question has been around ever since the theme group began … and was one of the first parts (I, group 1) |
Priority | On the other hand, medicine, pulmonary medicine … that entire package and surgery and … primarily vascular surgery, they say Hallelujah, that’s what I want! (II, group 1) That’s what they [managers] understand, less infections—fewer days of care, money, money … and then in connection with operations, that they understand even if they don’t understand the evidence behind it (VII, group 2) | |
Evidence | It becomes more and more current the more … ah … articles that are produced, the more research that is presented, the importance of stopping in connection with an operation and not only just before it (III, group 3) The latest studies show that improvements can be seen even if they stop smoking 24 hours before [an operation] (IV, group 2) | |
Vision | So, it was utopian in that you weren’t to smoke between New York and Paris … damn, that is obvious today, where then, is the utopia? (IV, group 3) | |
Facilitators | Leadership | Yes, but I can’t convince my colleagues to work in this way if I have no support from the management … who have decided that we are to work that way … it doesn’t work … if you don’t have it … then you can’t, no … (IV, group 3) |
Guidelines | And now come the guidelines … from The National Board of Health and Welfare […] and there comes … what we were talking about, being a part of those guidelines (I, group 2) | |
Credibility | In order to be able to give them the best results[…] you need … credibility … as personnel, you have to be a good example, and to do this you have to be smoke-free at the hospital […] and have a tobacco-free policy (IV, group 3) | |
Knowledge | That healing improves, and that maybe people are aware of this, but what percentage, and what does it imply in hospital days and what are the implications for costs and suffering …? (IV, group 2) | |
Information material | We have together produced … material ,… that leaflet looks more or less identical […] but it has been helpful, I think, for a line of argument … that we have discussed … what information is to be in it so that everyone can understand it (IV, group 2) … some type of short program for doctors to show in a PowerPoint presentation or on the computer or something, just concerning a smoking stop before surgery, the importance of it (I, group 1) | |
Process | Very important that when they come home, they should be automatically contacted [by PHC], so they can get this information there first, then further information at the hospital, when you go home so you get someone [from primary health care] to be in contact with afterwards (I, group 1) | |
Barriers | Opinions | But from what I’ve seen there, if you have a smoking nurse or nurse’s aid having this conversation, they skip this question. They don’t mention it (II, group 2) And it’s a question of credibility. If I’m going to be operated on and the person opposite me is telling me to quit smoking while I can smell the smell of old cigarettes on them … I’m not going to accept their message (II, group 1) An orthopedic surgeon lectured and pointed out time and time again it was a question of cigarettes … cigarettes and not snuff (III, group 3) |
Lack of knowledge | Because we need to raise the level of knowledge so that everyone really knows this properly (I, group 1) | |
Information | You look, and see you have a date for surgery, and that date, that is what is interesting. If it’s accompanied by something more it’s easy to overlook it, some read, some read everything they’re sent, but some don’t read at all (II, group 2) | |
Medical record system | … and it’s a very slow and old fashioned system to get in follow-ups and parameters that weren’t there before (II, group 2) | |
Follow-up | Yes it’s a defect in … all the work we do, the lack of follow-up … we are … very energetic … or fairly energetic when starting something new, but the follow-up is … unfortunately neglected … if there is no way to build it in from the beginning in some way (I, group 2) Yes, when you’ve put in so much work and then there’s no one who requests it … then it’s no use (V, group 2) | |
Inertia | This was some time in October 2008 [the heads of the clinic decided to test the question] … we are not to believe it will happen fast (II, group 1) Then there has been a load of discussions, but it’s like lice on a stick of tar … which is what it’s about … we shouldn’t believe it will happen quickly (II, group 1) |
Category | Subcategory | Quotation |
---|---|---|
General experiences | Development over time | I believe that the tobacco task force existed before we began, so to speak, working in a more structured manner … theme groups in that way. It felt like there was a great need and there was a foundation […] in the network … for health promotion you must work with the issue of tobacco (I, group 1) The work was not so structured initially, but was more of a network, and we met, but it has changed […] has gained a structure (V, group 3) |
Goals | It is to attempt to influence medical training. To raise these questions, to lift the importance of tobacco-preventive measures (II, group 1) So we can cooperate with other theme groups in some way with this, in our job as … a tobacco theme group (IV, group 2) | |
Recruitment | Some things we need to think of concerning theme groups in general […] that sometimes it is the specialists, those who are dedicated, who come to the theme groups, because those are the ones they send. But they have no proper grip of HFS work perhaps, and they have no idea of how to work within other structures […]so there is therefore a need for … a mixture and a blend (I, group 1) | |
Possibilities | Practical | I see this more as networking, where we meet regularly and can exchange experiences (II, group 1) It is the role of the theme group to update and remind all hospitals that now something new has come, new facts to be updated … (VI, group 2) |
Emotional | Yes, I believe we have some everyday knowledge of this … psychologically this is also considered … status … to be part of a network, to participate in this way of reasoning (II, group 1) It provides an unbelievable shot in the arm for work, and when you feel that, damn, this is taking so long, then suddenly, you get energy and have the strength to carry on a while longer (I, group 3) | |
Challenges | Participation | Because there are so many who are in the network who haven’t participated in a single meeting (II, group 1) |
Discrepancy in experience | It is a huge span for how far we have come with tobacco issues and therefore it is very difficult to, ah … get anywhere with one single question (II, group 2) | |
Structure | In the short time I have participated, the schedule and subjects for discussion in the theme groups have not been determined beforehand … when you go there you don’t know the subject to be discussed […] the working method has not yet been established (II, group 1) | |
Resources | Then it’s also because we have gotten more money for the network, so we have had possibilities to develop our work in another way (III, group 3) … but then you come home to your little cave and there you have … .not even had the time to do what you agreed to do for the network, there are … no margins left in the system (I, group 2) |
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Carlfjord, S.; Kristenson, M.; Lindberg, M. Experiences of Working with the Tobacco Issue in the Context of Health Promoting Hospitals and Health Services: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2011, 8, 498-513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph8020498
Carlfjord S, Kristenson M, Lindberg M. Experiences of Working with the Tobacco Issue in the Context of Health Promoting Hospitals and Health Services: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2011; 8(2):498-513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph8020498
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarlfjord, Siw, Margareta Kristenson, and Malou Lindberg. 2011. "Experiences of Working with the Tobacco Issue in the Context of Health Promoting Hospitals and Health Services: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 8, no. 2: 498-513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph8020498
APA StyleCarlfjord, S., Kristenson, M., & Lindberg, M. (2011). Experiences of Working with the Tobacco Issue in the Context of Health Promoting Hospitals and Health Services: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 8(2), 498-513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph8020498