Nicotine Screening and Cessation Education Among Patients Awaiting Total Joint Arthroplasty: A Quality Improvement Project.
Lindsay AppletonJoshua BarnesHollis RayJulie ThompsonMichael ZychowiczPublished in: Orthopedic nursing (2024)
Orthopedic surgical patients who use nicotine are at a high risk for postoperative complications including infection, respiratory failure, cardiac arrest, and death. Periprosthetic joint infections may result from nicotine-induced immunosuppression and microvascular changes, increasing perioperative morbidity and mortality. These complications result in higher health care costs, increased length of stay, and loss of reimbursement due to readmissions. Four weeks of nicotine cessation prior to arthroplasty decreases these risks; however, perioperative teams may lack reliable nicotine screening and cessation education methods. This project identified inconsistencies in nicotine screening and cessation counseling in the preoperative setting, which contributed to surgery cancellations among patients who required to demonstrate nicotine cessation preoperatively. Standardization of preoperative nicotine screening and patient cessation education resources can improve the identification of orthopedic patients who use nicotine and provide concrete, proven methods of achieving nicotine cessation prior to elective primary arthroplasty. Investment from perioperative staff is essential to ensure success.
Keyphrases
- smoking cessation
- healthcare
- patients undergoing
- quality improvement
- cardiac arrest
- cardiac surgery
- minimally invasive
- respiratory failure
- intensive care unit
- risk factors
- acute kidney injury
- oxidative stress
- hepatitis c virus
- social media
- acute coronary syndrome
- case report
- total knee arthroplasty
- health insurance
- preterm birth
- human health
- diabetic rats
- hiv testing