Litcius/Paper detail

Carbon monoxide monitoring to objectively measure smoking status in cardiac rehabilitation.

Diann E. Gaalema, Blair Yant, Sherrie Khadanga, Patrick D. Savage, Jason L. Rengo, Philip A. Ades

2022Health Psychology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Participation in cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is associated with reduced morbidity and mortality. However, most programs rely on self-report measures when assessing the critical risk factor of smoking. This study examined smoking status using self-report versus objective measurement using expired carbon monoxide (CO) and compared patient characteristics by CO level. METHOD: Patients were screened for smoking status when entering CR by self-report and by objectively measured CO. Measures of aerobic fitness, educational attainment, depressive symptoms, and self-reported physical function were also collected. The discrepancy between smoking status based on self-report and objective measurement was examined and patient characteristics by CO measurement were compared. RESULTS: < .01). CONCLUSIONS: A substantial number of patients who are actively smoking may be misclassified by relying on patient report alone. CO monitoring provides a simple and objective method of systematically screening patients. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRehabilitationDepression (economics)Physical therapySmoking cessationInternal medicineEconomicsPathologyMacroeconomicsHeme Oxygenase-1 and Carbon MonoxideCardiac Health and Mental HealthSmoking Behavior and Cessation