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The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine 20 (2): 174-180 (2007)
DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2007.02.060018
© 2007 American Board of Family Medicine
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Original Research

Practice-based Assessment of Tobacco Usage in Southwestern Primary Care Patients: A Research Involving Outpatient Settings Network (RIOS Net) Study

Shawn Ralston, MD, Nicole Kellett, MA, Robert L. Williams, MD, MPH, Cheryl Schmitt, MS and Charles Q. North, MD, MS

Department of Pediatrics (SR), University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, NM
Department of Family and Community Medicine (NK, RLW, CS), University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, NM
Indian Health Service, Albuquerque Service Unit, Albuquerque, NM (CQN)

Correspondence: Corresponding author: Robert Williams, MD, MPH, University of New Mexico Department of Family and Community Medicine, 2400 Tucker NE, Albuquerque, NM 87131 (E-mail: rlwilliams{at}salud.unm.edu)

Purpose: Primary care clinicians rely, perhaps erroneously, on general population-based data about risk factors to help form their strategies for allocating time in the brief primary care encounter. We conducted a case study using rates of tobacco usage among people presenting for primary care to explore comparability to general population-based rates.

Methods: Clinicians in RIOS Net, a practice-based research network, gathered data on tobacco use for all patients presenting during a 2-week period. We compared those data to population-based data by gender and ethnicity.

Results: Ninety-one primary care clinicians reported data on 2442 patients. Primary care smoking rates differed in important ways from general population-based rates. Hispanic women smoked at more than twice the national population-based rate (25% vs 12%). Youth smoked at higher rates as well, particularly young Native American men.

Conclusions: Patients seen in primary care differ in important ways in rates and patterns of tobacco usage when compared with rates reported in population-based surveys. These differences could have important implications for preventive care within the context of multiple competing demands in the primary care encounter.





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M. A. Bowman and A. V. Neale
North American Primary Care Research Group President's Award
J Am Board Fam Med, January 1, 2008; 21(1): 1 - 3.
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