Study of smoking habits in hospital and attitudes of medical staff towards smoking. |
| |
Authors: | S. L. Senior |
| |
Abstract: | Most hospital policies place little or no restriction on patients'' smoking in hospital. In this study patients were surveyed to determine if they smoked and if their doctors advised or ordered them to stop smoking in hospital. As well, the smoking habits and attitudes towards smoking of the medical staff and other hospital workers were explored. Of 741 patients 37% were smokers, and those who responded fully to a questionnaire 86% continued to smoke in hospital. Patients who were advised or ordered not to smoke (59%) were no more likely to stop smoking than those who were not so advised or ordered. Physicians were less likely to smoke than other hospital staff, and those who did smoke were much more likely not to smoke while in the hospital. Physicians appear to have a reasonable appreciation of the health hazards of smoking, and almost two thirds are in favour of stricter restrictions on patients'' smoking in hospital. The ineffectiveness of their efforts is primarily due to hospital policies that are not in keeping with physicians'' standards of practice and with established knowledge of the deleterious effects of smoking on health. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|