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Smoking Cessation in Clinical Practice: How to Get Patients to Stop.

Tobacco use is an etiologic agent for many diseases treated by cardiac, vascular, and thoracic surgeons and contributes to increased perioperative complications and long-term risk. Smoking cessation may be challenging for patients and can be frustrating for clinicians. Lack of familiarity and pessimistic views toward cessation methods lead to underuse by physicians. Evidence-supported measures that increase chances of cessation include direct physician advice, approved pharmacotherapy, structured counseling, and a follow-up plan. Approved pharmacotherapy consists of varenicline, bupropion, or nicotine replacement therapy in the form of long-acting patches and short-acting forms of nicotine such as gum, lozenges, prescription nasal spray, or prescription inhaler. Direct physician advice is critical and strengthened when combined with more in-depth counseling from a specialist who may have more expertise and time. Integrating assessment and referral to counseling services into a clinical workflow can deliver resources in an efficient manner with the goal of providing the best available resources to all patients.

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