|
|
|||||||||||
Head of Pharmacy, St Andrews Hospital, Billing Road, Northampton NN15DG
Consultant Psychiatrist
Clinical Pharmacist, St Andrews Hospital, Northampton
|
|
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The aim of this survey was to examine staff views on smoking at work in a large psychiatric hospital. A postal questionnaire was sent to all clinical staff (n=1471) asking about their smoking habits and attitudes to smoking at work.
RESULTS
The response rate was 40.7%. Overall, 22.0% of respondents were smokers, with unqualified nursing staff having the highest rate (31.0%). The majority of staff did not favour a total ban on smoking by staff, patients or visitors. Smoking habit and profession influenced responses. Smokers and nurses were more permissive in their attitude towards smoking on wards than nonsmokers and psychiatrists.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Implementation of the governments recommendations on tobacco control in psychiatric units is likely to require considerable preparatory work with staff to ensure full compliance.
|
|
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Smoking has increasingly been banned from work and public places. In the USA and Australia there are now smoke-free prisons, hospitals and even psychiatric units. In the UK, many psychiatric units permit patients (and sometimes staff) to smoke in designated areas, but central policy now requires health care trusts to move towards being smoke-free (Health Development Agency, 2001). However, persuading psychiatric patients to stop smoking is very difficult (Hughes & Frances, 1995).
St Andrews Hospital in Northampton is a 500-bed charitable hospital offering specialist psychiatric treatment to people with a wide range of mental health problems. The majority of wards are locked. The hospitals smoking policy permits patients, visitors and staff to smoke in designated areas only. Each ward has a designated smoking area for patients. On some wards this area is also the designated staff smoking area; other wards have a separate staff smoking room. A ward survey in November 2002 asked ward managers to give the numbers of smokers and non-smokers on or attached to their wards. Returns indicated that 59% of patients and 35% of clinical staff were smokers. Smoking was more common in unqualified than qualified nurses (45% v. 32%).
The aim of this survey was to explore staff attitudes towards smoking in a large psychiatric hospital. Our hypothesis was that smokers would have different views from non-smokers, and that psychiatrists would have different views from nurses.
|
|
Method |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
The findings for all staff, smokers and non-smokers are shown in
Table 2. Most staff believed
that exposure to tobacco smoke might shorten their lives (500/580; 86.2%).
Non-smokers were more concerned that passive smoking might shorten their life
than smokers were that smoking might shorten their life (91.8% v.
66.1%;
2=52.92, P<0.0001). More non-smokers than
smokers were concerned about the effects of passive smoking on non-smoking
staff and patients (89.4% v. 61.4%;
2=54.60,
P<0.0001). Almost all respondents thought that patients should be
allowed to smoke in designated areas (561/597; 94.0%) and that patients became
less calm, or deteriorated, if they could not have cigarettes (517/555;
93.2%). A smaller majority thought that visitors (413/593; 69.6%) and staff
(451/593; 76.1%) should be allowed to smoke in designated areas. Non-smokers
were more likely than smokers to favour a total ban on smoking on the wards by
staff, patients and visitors (Table
2). A lower proportion of non-smokers than smokers thought that
staff should smoke with patients, or that staff smoking with patients was of
value in creating therapeutic relationships (47.2% v. 78.9%;
2=39.03, P<0.0001). Non-smokers were also more
likely to believe that patients who smoke should be encouraged to cut back or
stop, although the majority of smokers also believed this (89.8% v.
65.4%;
2=43.54, P<0.0001). Of the 132 respondents
who smoked, 63 (47.7%) said they wanted to stop smoking, although 74 (56.1%)
cited job stress as a barrier to stopping smoking.
|
The views of psychiatrists and nurses are shown in Table 3. In order to eliminate the confounding effect of smoking status, we compared the views of non-smoking nurses with those of the psychiatrists (all of whom were non-smokers). As there was no significant difference between the responses of unqualified and qualified nursing staff, these responses were combined. Psychiatrists were more likely than nurses to favour a total ban on staff smoking and, in particular, on staff smoking with patients. Only five psychiatrists (26.3%) believed that staff smoking with patients was of value in creating therapeutic relationships, whereas 53.0% of nurses thought that it was. No psychiatrist thought that cigarettes should be handed out to patients to achieve therapeutic goals; in contrast, 22.0% of nurses supported this view. All psychiatrists thought that patients who smoke should be encouraged to cut down and stop. Most nurses agreed, although 12.1% did not.
|
|
|
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The study has some methodological weaknesses. Respondents were asked to define themselves as smokers or non-smokers. Thus, long-standing smokers who had recently quit might call themselves non-smokers and their responses might be expected to differ from those of a lifelong non-smoker. Although the response rate of 41% was good for a postal questionnaire, based on the findings of the ward survey, smokers and nurses appeared to be underrepresented. The small number of psychiatrists (19) limits the comparison of psychiatrists and nurses attitudes. However, the divergence of views is interesting, and points to an area for further research. The findings of this survey relate to staff working in a specialist independent hospital with many long-stay patients, and cannot automatically be generalised to National Health Service acute psychiatric units.
The findings of the few studies that have investigated attitudes of psychiatric staff to smoking contrast with those of this study. A small survey of senior nurse managers of forensic units in the UK found that 46% of respondents believed staff should not smoke in front of patients under any circumstances, and 73% thought that nurses smoking with patients had no value in creating therapeutic relationships (Tarbuck, 1996). An Israeli study found that many psychiatric nurses often used cigarettes in order to appease patients and a quarter of staff denied the hazards of smoking (Mester et al, 1993). Although the practice was widely used in the past, it is now considered unethical to use tobacco as a reward.
There is now an expectation that mental health care trusts will move away from having designated smoking areas for staff (Health Development Agency, 2001). Judging by the results of this survey, a considerable amount of preparatory work would have to be done with staff, especially those who smoke, before such a policy could be successfully implemented. Nevertheless, smoking control programmes can reduce the prevalence of smoking in staff and increase the frequency of advice to patients to quit smoking (Batlle et al, 1991). A bigger step would be to make all psychiatric units smoke-free. In North America, such policies have been successfully implemented, with fewer adverse effects than staff anticipated (McNeill, 2001). In the UK, we are moving slowly but steadily towards smoke-free hospitals and public places, although psychiatric units seem likely to be one of the last places to continue to permit smoking, at least for patients.
|
|
Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (1998) Smoking Kills. A White Paper on Tobacco. London: Department of Health.
GARRATT, D. J., GOUGH, N. A.,TAYLOR, E. J., et al
(1978) Smoking in hospital: a survey of attitudes of staff,
patients, and visitors. Journal of Epidemiology and Community
Health, 32, 226
-228.
GUBBAY, J. (1992) Smoking and the Workplace. Centre for Health Policy Research, Norwich: University of East Anglia.
HEALTH DEVELOPMENT AGENCY (2001) Where Do We Go From Here? Tobacco Control Policies within Psychiatric and Long-stay Units. London: Health Development Agency.
HUGHES, J. R. & FRANCES, R. J. (1995) How to help
psychiatric patients stop smoking. Psychiatric
Services, 46, 435
-436.
HUGHES, J., HATSUKAMI, D., MITCHELL, J., et al
(1986) Prevalence of smoking among psychiatric outpatients.
American Journal of Psychiatry,
143, 993
-997.
HUSSAIN, S. F., TJEDER-BURTON, S., CAMPBELL, I. A., et al
(1993) Attitudes to smoking and smoking habits among hospital
staff. Thorax, 48, 174
-175.
McNEILL, A. (2001) Smoking and Mental Health A Review of the Literature. London: Smoke Free London Programme (http://www.ash.org.uk/html/policy/menlitrev.html).
MEIKLEJOHN, C., SANDERS, K. & BUTLER, S. (2003) Physical health care in medium secure services. Nursing Standard, 17, 33 -37.
MESTER, R.,TOREN, P., BEN-MOSHE, Y., et al (1993) Survey of smoking habits and attitudes of patients and staff in psychiatric hospitals. Psychopathology, 26, 69-75.[Medline]
TARBUCK, P. (1996) Smoking with patients: policy vs therapy. British Journal of Nursing, 5, 224-229.[Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
V. Villari and G. Barzega Smoking Bans on Psychiatric Units: Boundaries and Health Promotion Psychiatr Serv, September 1, 2008; 59(9): 1063 - 1064. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J. Smith and C. O'Callaghan Exploration of in-patient attitudes towards smoking within a large mental health trust Psychiatr. Bull., May 1, 2008; 32(5): 166 - 169. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J. Campion, K. Checinski, J. Nurse, and A. McNeill Smoking by people with mental illness and benefits of smoke-free mental health services Advan. Psychiatr. Treat., May 1, 2008; 14(3): 217 - 228. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
D. R. Smith and P. A. Leggat An international review of tobacco smoking research in the nursing profession, 1976-2006 Journal of Research in Nursing, March 1, 2007; 12(2): 165 - 181. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. Jochelson Smoke-free legislation and mental health units: the challenges ahead The British Journal of Psychiatry, December 1, 2006; 189(6): 479 - 480. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. O'Gara and R. McIvor Smoke-free psychiatric services Psychiatr. Bull., July 1, 2006; 30(7): 241 - 242. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| British Journal of Psychiatry | Advances in Psychiatric Treatment | All RCPsych Journals |