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Taking Charge: Understanding Tobacco Control’s Impact on Communities Christine Cheng, Partner Relations Director, Smoking Cessation Leadership Center Shelina D. Foderingham, Director Practice Improvement, The National Council Kansas Health Foundation, Fellows Program Friday, November 14, 2014 – Wichita, KS Today’s Topics • Overview: National Landscape • SCLC Partnerships: State and Local Community • Tobacco Control: Leading Preventable Cause of Death • Health Systems Changes • Barriers and Myths • Group Exercise © 2012 BHWP2 National Council for Behavioral Health National Landscape SAMHSA-HRSA CIHS, 2014 National Landscape SAMHSA-HRSA CIHS, 2014 National Landscape Cancer and Behavioral Health More than 50% of people with terminal cancer have at least one psychiatric disorder. Individuals with a mental illness may develop cancer at a 2.6 times higher due to late stage diagnosis because of inadequate screenings. Individuals with a mental illness have a higher rate of fatality due to cancer. What is the National Council doing? SAMHSA-HRSA CIHS, 2014 Practice Improvement & Workforce Development • Learning Collaborative and Communities – SUD, FQHC • SAMHSA-HRSA Center for Integrated Health Solutions • NY State Geriatric Technical Assistance Center • Ohio Training & Technical Assistance Center • CDC Capacity Building and National Behavioral Health Network for Tobacco & Cancer Control 10 Jointly funded by CDC’s Office on Smoking & Health & Division of Cancer Prevention & Control Provides resources and tools to help organizations reduce tobacco use and cancer among people with mental illness and addictions Visit www.BHtheChange.org and Join Today! Free Access to… Toolkits, training opportunities, virtual communities and other resources Webinars & Presentations State Strategy Sessions 1 of 8 CDC National Networks to eliminate cancer and tobacco disparities in priority populations #BHtheChange © 2012 BHWP 12 Smoking Cessation Leadership Center • Began in 2003 as a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation National Program Office • Subsequent grants from Legacy Foundation to address behavioral health, ARRA grant, CDC/CTG grants, SAMHSA for pioneers and state summits • Aims to increase smoking cessation rates and increase the number of health professionals who help smokers quit. © 2012 BHWP 13 How We Work • • • • • • Identify champions Create partnerships Help create action plans Do not reinvent the wheel Low cost, no cost resources Promote message through health journals, publications and social media © 2012 BHWP 14 SCLC and Behavioral Health • Convened leaders in BH for a summit in 2007 • Meeting at SAMSHA with the then administrator Terry Cline in 2008, which lead to … • SAMHSA 100 pioneers initiative in 2009 • SAMHSA leadership academy for wellness and smoking cessation with 8 states from 2010-13 • SAMHSA policy academy held in June 2014 © 2012 BHWP 15 SAMHSA In-Service Training Poster July 7, 2008 © 2012 BHWP 16 100 Pioneers for Smoking Cessation • Grantees from all 3 SAMHSA centers: o CMHS, CSAT, CSAP • Wide range of interventionists o Consumer groups o Health care providers o Community centers o Treatment centers o Youth o Rehabilitation centers • 2nd phase of initiative with 25 Pioneers © 2012 BHWP 17 SAMHSA Pioneers Map Represent 38 states Blue = Phase I Pioneers Yellow = Phase II Pioneers © 2012 BHWP 18 Performance Partnership Model • Used in all 8 SAMHSA leadership academy states • Partnership organized around a specific, measurable result, asking 4 questions: 1. Where are we now? (baseline) % intervene with patient who smoke or current prevalence 2. Where do we want to be? (target) increase to % in xx years or decrease prevalence by xx% 3. How will we get there? (multiple strategies) 4. How will we know we are getting there? (evaluation/measures) © 2012 BHWP 19 Leadership Academies for Wellness and Smoking Cessation • 2010-2013 Leadership Academies for Wellness and Smoking Cessation o Purpose: To launch statewide partnerships among behavioral health providers, consumers, public health groups, and other stakeholders to create and implement an action plan to reduce smoking prevalence among behavioral health consumers and staff. o Eight states selected to participate in 1-2 day planning summits © 2012 BHWP 20 8 State Leadership Academies 8 © 2012 BHWP 21 Leadership Academy Participants • • • • • • • • • • • • • • State mental health department State substance abuse department State tobacco control department/state Medicaid department Consumer organizations Hospitals Federal agency representatives from SAMHSA, HRSA, CDC, VA Academic medical centers State branches of national advocacy groups such as NAMI or MHA Patient advocacy groups Community advocacy groups Youth organizations Insurance companies SCLC Leadership and staff Results-based facilitator © 2012 BHWP 22 2012 Progress Report: Common Strategy Groups • • • • • • Consumers and Community: 6 out of 7 states Provider Education: 6 out of 7 states Data Development: 5 out of 7 states State Level Policy: 5 out of 7 states Behavioral Health Facilities: 4 out of 7 states Quitline: 4 out of 7 states © 2012 BHWP 23 2013: Impact: Awareness of Tobacco Intervention among BH Providers 71% or 5 out of 7 states strongly agree © 2012 BHWP 24 State Leadership Academies Strongly Interested in Partnering with Others 100% or all 7 states strongly interested in partnering with other states © 2012 BHWP 25 Tobacco: Leading Preventable Cause of Death 1. How many annual deaths are caused by smoking? 1. What was the national prevalence in 1964 when the first Surgeon General’s report on smoking and health was released? © 2012 BHWP 26 Tobacco’s Deadly Toll • • • • 480,000 deaths in the U.S. each year 4.8 million deaths world wide each year 10 million deaths estimated by year 2030 50,000 deaths in the U.S. due to second-hand smoke exposure • 8.6 million disabled from tobacco in the U.S. alone • 46.6 million smokers in U.S. (78% daily smokers) © 2012 BHWP 27 Behavioral Causes of Annual Deaths in the United States 450 435 400 365 350 300 250 * 200 150 85 100 50 43 20 29 17 0 Sexual Behavior Alcohol Motor Vehicle Guns Drug Obesity/ Smoking Induced Inactivity suffer from mental * Also illness and/or substance Mokdad et al, JAMA 2004; 291:1238-1245. Mokdad et al; JAMA. 2005; 293:293 abuse © 2012 BHWP 28 2008 Tobacco Dependence Clinical Practice Guideline “All smokers with psychiatric disorders, including substance use disorders, should be offered tobacco dependence treatment, and clinicians must overcome their reluctance to treat this population” (Fiore et al., 2008, p. 154). 29 © 2012 BHWP 29 Health Consequences of Smoking Cancers: – – – – – – – – – – Cardiovascular diseases Acute myeloid leukemia Bladder and kidney Cervical Colon, liver, pancreas Esophageal Gastric Laryngeal Lung Oral cavity and pharyngeal Prostate (↓survival) Pulmonary diseases: – Acute (e.g., pneumonia) – Chronic (e.g., COPD) – Tuberculosis – – – – – Abdominal aortic aneurysm Coronary heart disease Cerebrovascular disease Peripheral arterial disease Type 2 diabetes mellitus Reproductive effects – Reduced fertility in women – Poor pregnancy outcomes (ectopic pregnancy, congenital anomalies, low birth weight, preterm delivery) – Infant mortality; childhood obesity Other effects: cataract; osteoporosis; Crohn’s; periodontitis,; poor surgical outcomes; Alzheimer's; rheumatoid arthritis; less sleep U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The Health Consequences of Smoking: A Report of the Surgeon General, 2014. © 2012 BHWP 30 Causal Associations with Second-hand Smoke • • Developmental • – Low birth weight – Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) – Pre-term delivery -- Childhood depression Respiratory • – Asthma induction and exacerbation – Eye and nasal irritation – Bronchitis, pneumonia, otitis media, bruxism in children – Decreased hearing in teens Carcinogenic – Lung cancer – Nasal sinus cancer – Breast cancer (younger, premenopausal women) Cardiovascular – Heart disease mortality – Acute and chronic coronary heart disease morbidity – Altered vascular properties There is no safe level of second-hand smoke. USDHHS. (2006). The Health Consequences of Involuntary Exposure to Tobacco Smoke: Report of the Surgeon General. © 2012 BHWP 31 Medications that Smoking Decreases Blood Levels Brand Name Elavil* Anafranil* Aventyl/Pamelor* Tofranil* Luvox* Thorazine* Prolixin* Haldol* Clorizaril* Zyprexa* Tylenol Inderal Slo-bid, Slo-Phyllin, Theo-24, Theo-Dur, Theobid, Theovent Generic Name Amitriptyline Clomipramine Nortiptyline Imipramine Fluvoxamine Chlorpromazine Fluphenazine Haloperidol Clozapine Olanzapine Acetominophen Propanolol Theophylline Caffeine *Psychoactive medications © 2012 BHWP 32 Youth Smoking • 1,000 American adolescents become regular tobacco users every day • Early teen smokers with low nicotine exposure already show brain activation patterns of heavy adult smokers • Youth smoking is associated with mental and addiction disorders later in life © 2012 BHWP 33 Never Too Late to Quit* Age of quitting smoking 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 Years of life saved 10 9 8 4 * Jha, NEJM Jan 24, 2013 © 2012 BHWP 34 Systems Changes: We Know What Works • • • • • • Raising tobacco taxes and price Tobacco-free indoor air laws and workplace tobacco bans State prevention and cessation initiatives (e.g. quit line) Combination of NRT and counseling Restriction of tobacco sales to minors Anti-tobacco counter-marketing efforts Contact: [email protected] | 202.684.7457 www.TheNationalCouncil.org Going Tobacco-Free Contact: [email protected] | 202.684.7457 36 Barriers and Myths Poll 1. Should you do concurrent tobacco cessation & addiction treatment and/or MH treatment? © 2012 BHWP 37 Smoking & Behavioral Health: A Health Disparity Issue • • • • • • • Elevated prevalence of use Targeted marketing by the tobacco industry Serious health consequences Significant costs & social isolation Enabling environments Lower access to treatment Inadequate research base © 2012 BHWP 38 Major Target Market • 44% to 46% of cigarettes consumed in the U.S. by smokers with psychiatric or addictive disorders (Lasser, 2000; Grant, 2002) • 175 billion cigarettes and $39 billion in annual tobacco sales (USDA, 2004) © 2012 BHWP 39 Smoking Prevalence by MH Diagnosis 2007 NHIS data • Schizophrenia • Bipolar disorder • ADD/ADHD 59.1% 46.4% 37.2% Current smoking: • 1 MH • 2 MH • 3+ MH 31.9% 41.8% 61.4% Grant et al., 2004, Lasser et al., 2000 • Major depression 45-50% • Bipolar disorder 50-70% • Schizophrenia 70-90% © 2012 BHWP 40 Unintended Consequences of Addictions Treatment Usually if a person has not started smoking by age 20, it is unlikely they will ever smoke. However, a significant number of adults start smoking while in treatment/recovery, suggesting the treatment climate is conducive to smoking.* * Friend & Pagano, 2004 © 2012 BHWP 41 Myths • Individuals with mental illness don’t want to quit • Individuals with mental illness can’t quit o False – can and do quit at a rate slightly lower than the general population • Treating tobacco use concurrent is detrimental to recovery and/or mental illness o False – increase sobriety by 25%* *Prochaska, et. al., 2006 © 2012 BHWP 42 Just as Ready to Quit Smoking as the General Population © 2012 BHWP 43 Smokers with Bipolar Disorder: Online Survey (N=685) • Few reported a psychiatrist (27%), therapist (18%), or case manager (6%) ever advised them to quit smoking (Prochaska, Reyes, Schroeder, et al. (2011). Bipolar Disorders) Several reported discouragement to quit from mental health providers © 2012 BHWP 44 Need for Smoking Intervention • Tobacco treatment needs to be a higher priority for behavioral health. • While focusing on addictions and mental health, clinicians sometimes miss this more deadly condition. • Addressing tobacco use can improve health, ease pain, and save lives. © 2012 BHWP 45 Leadership Activity • If we’re moving towards integrated care, within your sphere of influence, how will you incorporate tobacco control & prevention efforts targeting people with SMI? • How will you address the specific needs of priority populations (i.e., racial/ethnic minorities, low SES, rural/frontier, and LGBT)? Leadership Activity • How are you incorporating tobacco cessation activities as part of your KHF implementation plan? Leadership Activity • Would you push for tobacco cessation & what is your role as a leader within your organization? • Who’s responsible for ensuring that tobacco control efforts meet the needs of SMI populations? In treatment settings? In public health? In communities? And How do we implement this? • Would you push for tobacco cessation efforts for SMI populations… Report Out from Leadership Activity • Name 1 thing you learned from this exercise. • Name 1 thing that you will do when you go home to improve tobacco control efforts. Questions and Answers © 2012 BHWP 50 Contact US! Shelina Foderingham [email protected] 202-684-7457, ext. 272 Christine Cheng [email protected] 415-476-0216 or toll free, 877-509-3786 © 2012 BHWP 51 Indoor Smoking Room Kinston Psychiatric Hospital, NJ © 2012 BHWP 52