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- W2068283669 abstract "Cigarette smoking remains a leading cause of preventable morbidity and mortality, claiming more than 5 million lives annually 1, 2 and with enormous costs world-wide. There have been substantial gains in tobacco control efforts over the past few decades, as exemplified by the WHO Tobacco Free Initiative and Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, amongts innumerable international, national and regional efforts, but there is a considerably long road ahead 2. One aspect of this effort involves reducing demand for tobacco, part of which means increasing demand for effective treatment 3-5. An ongoing dialogue about possible determinants of demand seems essential. For this reason, the intention of this commentary is to highlight a few sources of demand for smoking treatment suggested by the study by Willemsen and colleagues 6 and elsewhere. Lack of health insurance coverage is a well-known barrier that limits demand for treatment, and moving to coverage generally results in a surge in treatment initiation 7. As demonstrated in Willemsen et al. 6, ensured coverage explicitly lowers the bar on costs to drive demand 8. Importantly, this occurs against a backdrop of individual motivation to quit and decision-making about when (and if) to seek treatment. Some smokers motivated to quit may postpone seeking treatment opting to wait to see if it becomes an insured benefit, potentially producing pent-up demand. For others, treatment coverage itself may drive readiness to quit and increase demand. For example, the observation that decision-makers find quitting smoking and increasing treatment access sufficiently compelling as to devote limited resources to making treatment a covered benefit, possibly postponing or obviating coverage of other pressing health care issues, may heightened public perception of the priority of quitting, normalize non-smoking, and drive demand for treatment. A similar process likely occurs when smaller entities (employers, health-care institutions, private insurance companies) make treatment a priority through incentives or other mechanisms. Clearly, efforts targeting cost barriers address a fundamental need. Expanding treatment options may also drive demand. In Willemsen et al. 7, prior to 2011, the only treatment widely available at no cost was seemingly the National Quitline. In 2011 not only did smoking treatment become a covered benefit, but treatment options were also expanded to include group, face-to-face and telephone counseling, as well as pharmacotherapy. This underscores the importance of accounting for individual preferences and needs in health-care decisions. However, also important are mass media campaigns that make the public aware of accessible, low-cost interventions 9, 10. It is notable that the Dutch study included essentially two campaigns, one coinciding with the start of the reimbursed care program and another informing the public of its imminent termination 6. The combination of universal coverage plus wide-reaching communication of treatment options to stakeholders seems to be an essential key to effective broad-based interventions 11. Policy decisions and political will are also important factors in individual decisions around smoking cessation. For example, in countries that have lists of essential health care, updates occur in cycles. Decision-making about health-care utilization at the consumer level therefore occurs in the context of shifts in covered benefits that are out of individuals’ control. With statutory coverage, while the cyclical nature of coverage may be predictable, less predictable are the contents of future benefits. Much research examines insurance coverage as a static process and utilization during periods without or with coverage and especially in specific populations, but how people behave while anticipating coverage loss is unclear. One possibility is that there is an increase in treatment initiation as the end of coverage is anticipated, perhaps indicating a stockpiling effect, although the conditions in which this might occur are uncertain 12. Cyclical and unpredictable aspects of coverage may increase, or may decrease, demand for treatment, depending on circumstances. Similar processes may occur in private health insurance systems with shifts in coverage not controlled by the consumer. Nonetheless, the reality of a seemingly large pool of demand not being met underscores again the importance of minimizing the need for individuals to postpone seeking smoking treatment, which is an overwhelmingly cost-effective endeavor 13, 14, on the basis of cost alone. Overall, the study by Willemsen et al. 7 presents the opportunity for further discussion about how to spend limited resources for smoking cessation in ways that will have the greatest public health impact. It does not answer questions definitively about whether increasing benefits for smoking cessation alone results in greater cessation. However, the study spotlights issues related to demand, and punctuates the need to explore further the dimensions of population-based interventions so that we might maximize benefits. Perhaps notably, the 2013 Dutch basic insurance plan re-enlists smoking cessation treatment, presumably in response to demand. None." @default.
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- W2068283669 date "2013-02-18" @default.
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- W2068283669 title "Commentary on Willemsenet al. (2013): Increasing demand for smoking cessation on a national level" @default.
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- W2068283669 doi "https://doi.org/10.1111/add.12096" @default.
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