Telehealth delivery of tobacco cessation treatment in cancer care: An ongoing innovation accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic Review


Author: The Cancer Center Cessation Initiative Telehealth Working Group
Editor: Kotsen, C.
Review Title: Telehealth delivery of tobacco cessation treatment in cancer care: An ongoing innovation accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic
Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic precipitated a rapid transformation in healthcare delivery. Ambulatory care abruptly shifted from in-person to telehealth visits with providers using digital video and audio tools to reach patients at home. Advantages to telehealth care include enhanced patient convenience and provider efficiencies, but financial, geographic, privacy, and access barriers to telehealth also exist. These are disproportionately greater for older adults and for those in rural areas, low-income communities, and communities of color, threatening to worsen preexisting disparities in tobacco use and health. Pandemic-associated regulatory changes regarding privacy and billing allowed many Cancer Center Cessation Initiative (C3I) programs in NCI-designated Cancer Centers to start or expand video-based telehealth care. Using 3 C3I programs as examples, we describe the methods used to shift to telehealth delivery. Although telephone-delivered treatment was already a core tobacco treatment modality with a robust evidence base, little research has yet compared the effectiveness of tobacco cessation treatment delivery by video versus phone or in-person modalities. Video-delivery has shown greater medication adherence, higher patient satisfaction, and better retention in care than phone-based delivery, and may improve cessation outcomes. We outline key questions for further investigation to advance telehealth for tobacco cessation treatment in cancer care. © JNCCN-Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network 2021
Keywords: aged; patient satisfaction; neoplasm; neoplasms; smoking cessation; telemedicine; pandemic; tobacco use cessation; humans; human; pandemics; covid-19; sars-cov-2
Journal Title: Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network
Volume: 19
Issue: Suppl. 1
ISSN: 1540-1405
Publisher: Harborside Press  
Date Published: 2021-11-01
Start Page: S21
End Page: S24
Language: English
DOI: 10.6004/jnccn.2021.7092
PUBMED: 34872049
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC9040141
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 February 2022 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Chris Samuel Kotsen
    11 Kotsen