A prescription smoking cessation medication was used by only about 7 percent of older adults who smoked used within 90 days after being discharged from a hospital following a heart attack

‘The immediate period after a myocardial infarction represents a unique window of opportunity to encourage patients to quit smoking.’

Among the 9,193 smoking patients (median age, 70 years) with MI in this analysis, 97 percent received smoking cessation counseling during their hospitalization, yet only 7 percent had early-prescription SCM use (bupropion, 47 percent; varenicline, 53 percent). Varenicline use dropped from 12.6 percent in 2007 to 2.2 percent in 2013; bupropion use stayed consistently low (2.5 percent in 2007, 3.2 percent in 2013). The median duration of use was 6.2 weeks for bupropion and 4.3 weeks for varenicline (the typically recommended course is 12 weeks).




Factors associated with early SCM use: being younger; female; living in counties with greater than the median high school graduate rate; having chronic lung disease; having undergone in-hospital coronary revascularization; having peripheral arterial disease.
Limitations of the study included the lack of data about actual prescription rates, smoking cessation rates post-MI, or reasons for drug prescription or discontinuation.
"Because individuals who successfully quit smoking do so most frequently in the immediate post-MI period, current practices indicate a missed opportunity for smoking cessation and secondary prevention efforts," the authors write.
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