Format
Scientific article
Publication Date
Published by / Citation
Skinner, A. L., West, R., Raw, M., Anderson, E., and Munafò, M. R. (2017) Evaluating clinical stop‐smoking services globally: towards a minimum data set. Addiction, doi: 10.1111/add.14072.
Original Language

English

Country
United Kingdom
Keywords
cessation
data
global
minimum
set
smoking

Evaluating Clinical Stop‐Smoking Services Globally: Towards a Minimum Data Set

Abstract

Background and aims

Behavioural and pharmacological support for smoking cessation improves the chances of success and represents a highly cost‐effective way of preventing chronic disease and premature death. There is a large number of clinical stop‐smoking services throughout the world. These could be connected into a global network to provide data to assess what treatment components are most effective, for what populations and in what settings. To enable this, a minimum data set (MDS) is required to standardize the data captured from smoking cessation services globally.

Methods

We describe some of the key steps involved in developing a global MDS for smoking cessation services and methodologies to be considered for their implementation, including approaches for reaching consensus on data items to include in a MDS and for its robust validation. We use informal approximations of these methods to produce an example global MDS for smoking cessation. Our aim with this is to stimulate further discussion around the development of a global MDS for smoking cessation services.

Results

Our example MDS comprises three sections. The first is a set of data items characterizing treatments offered by a service. The second is a small core set of data items describing clients’ characteristics, engagement with the service and outcomes. The third is an extended set of client data items to be captured in addition to the core data items wherever resources permit.

Conclusions

There would be benefit in establishing a minimum data set (MDS) to standardize data captured for smoking cessation services globally. Once implemented, a formal MDS could provide a basis for meaningful evaluations of different smoking cessation treatments in different populations in a variety of settings across many countries.

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