Doctors’ Survey — India
VIEW REPORTS BY COUNTRY
India 🇮🇳
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Physicians Have Misperceptions About Nicotine
Participants were asked: “To what extent do you agree that nicotine by itself directly causes each of the smoking-related conditions below: Lung cancer, Bladder cancer, Head/neck/gastric cancers, Atherosclerosis, Birth defects, COPD.” The results include responses from “moderately agree” to “completely agree.”
| Nicotine causes lung cancer | 88% |
| Nicotine causes atherosclerosis | 87% |
| Nicotine causes COPD | 86% |
| Nicotine causes head/neck gastric cancers | 78% |
| Nicotine causes birth defects | 75% |
| Nicotine causes bladder cancer | 71% |
85%
of respondents are interested in taking training on how to help their patients who smoke combustible tobacco products by reducing quitting smoking.
94%
of physicians feel like helping patients quit smoking is a priority.
Participants were asked: “Which of the following interventions or methods to aid your patients with smoking reduction/cessation do you typically recommend or prescribe to your patients who want to reduce or quit smoking?”
Social or family support
Psychological/psychiatric counseling or therapy
Over-the-counter nicotine replacement therapy
Prescription medication for smoking cessation
Chewing/sucking/dipping forms of tobacco products
Alternative therapy
Cold turkey (suddenly quitting with no other help)
Withdrawal app
Electronic nicotine delivery system/ecig
Referral to smoking cessation clinics
Heated tobacco products
Participants were asked: “Which of the following topics do you typically discuss or take action with your patients who smoke combustible forms of tobacco, regardless of other conditions they may have?”
| Discuss health risks related to continued smoking | 80% |
| Discuss health benefits of quitting to the patient | 78% |
| Explain the various methods available to help the patient reduce/quit smoking | 72% |
| Recommend cutting down on the amount of smokable tobacco products used | 71% |
| Ask how much the patient smokes and for how long | 71% |
| Ask about patient’s current use of tobacco or nicotine-containing products other than combustible tobacco products | 67% |
| Assist the patient to develop a plan to quit | 67% |
| Assess importance of quitting to the patient | 67% |
| Record smoking status on the patient chart or record | 60% |
| Assess challenges to quitting use of smokable tobacco | 60% |
| Assess interest in trying a specific resource/product | 60% |
| Advise the patient to quit rather than gradually reduce | 59% |
| Discuss smoking at every visit | 56% |