News Release - October 9, 2009

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Date: October 9, 2009
Contact: Jennifer Forbes
Communication & Public Affairs
Phone: 732-235-6356
Email:  jenn.forbes@umdnj.edu

  

Smoking Cessation Program for Mental Health Patients Honored by American Psychiatric Association

 

New Brunswick, NJ -- The division of addiction psychiatry at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School has championed efforts to reduce tobacco use among individuals with mental illness, a group estimated to consume nearly half of all cigarettes in the United States.  Those efforts have received national recognition by the American Psychiatric Association (APA), which granted a Silver Achievement Award to the CHOICES program today at a ceremony in New York City. 

CHOICES – Consumers Helping Others Improve Their Condition by Ending Smoking – employs peer counselors, called Consumer Tobacco Advocates (CTA), to promote smoking cessation in smokers with mental illness. The CTAs are nonsmokers or former smokers who are moderately impaired or disabled by mental illness. They receive 30 hours of intensive tobacco training and then reach out to their peers in mental health centers, psychiatric hospitals, group homes, and self-help centers. Their goal is not to provide treatment, but to assist and motivate their peers to address tobacco use by sharing their own experiences with quitting, providing educational materials, and linking their peers to treatment, referrals, advocacy and support for smoking cessation in New Jersey.

“Peers are less threatening than professionals,” said Jill Williams, MD, associate professor of psychiatry at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and co-founder and medical director of the program. “CHOICES symbolizes empowerment and personal choice in recovery by utilizing peer counselors to deliver the vital message to smokers with mental illness that addressing tobacco use is important to their health and to motivate them to seek treatment.”

By presenting the Silver Award, the APA honored CHOICES’ unique peer-to-peer grass-roots approach to promoting tobacco cessation.  In its October issue of Psychiatric Services journal, the APA noted, “The CHOICES program exemplifies many aspects of a successful wellness and recovery initiative. For example, it targets a group with a vital health care need; seeks to reduce tobacco’s harm in a vulnerable group; focuses its efforts in the community, which best accommodates the target population; employs peers to reduce educational and cultural barriers; and develops successful partnerships with key stakeholders for sustainability.”

According to Dr. Williams and co-founder Marie Verna, the program’s advocacy director and senior training and consultation specialist at UMDNJ-University Behavioral Healthcare’s Center for Excellence in Psychiatry, the CHOICES team has conducted more than 280 community visits, reaching more than 9,600 smokers with mental illness, since the program’s inception in 2005.  The team also participates in consumer conferences and health-related fairs. 

In an outcome study of the CHOICES program, consumers that had met individually with a peer counselor for personalized feedback about their smoking experienced a significant decrease in the number of cigarettes smoked each day and an increase in the number of quit attempts.  Many study participants reported that after meeting with a CTA they had talked to their mental health provider about getting help with quitting smoking. Participants also reported that the CTAs were extremely knowledgeable about tobacco and interested in their smoking. Seventy percent of those surveyed said that talking to a peer about their smoking was much easier than talking to a mental health professional.

The CTAs also reported that their experience of working with CHOICES has helped them achieve greater recovery in their own mental illness.  Each has gone on to achieve personal milestones including participating in publications, statewide and consumer conferences on wellness and recovery and/or have gone on to seek additional formal education.  

CHOICES is based in the department of psychiatry at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and partnered with the Mental Health Association of New Jersey, a consumer-driven mental health advocacy organization, and the New Jersey State Division of Mental Health Services, a primary source of funding for the program. CHOICES is listed as a best-practices resource in several national provider toolkits for the treatment of tobacco use in mental health settings, including those published by the Smoking Cessation Leadership and the Behavioral Health and Wellness Program of the University of Colorado in 2009. The CHOICES model is expanding beyond New Jersey to reach a larger audience of smokers. A multistate implementation of CHOICES is now underway on the West Coast.

More information on CHOICES, visit http://njchoices.org/.

 

About Robert Wood Johnson Medical School:

As one of the nation’s leading comprehensive medical schools, UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School is dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in education, research, health care delivery, and the promotion of community health. In cooperation with Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, the medical school’s principal affiliate, they comprise New Jersey’s premier academic medical center. In addition, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School has 34 other hospital affiliates and ambulatory care sites throughout the region.

As one of the eight schools of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey with 2,800 full-time and volunteer faculty, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School encompasses 22 basic science and clinical departments, hosts centers and institutes including The Cancer Institute of New Jersey, the Child Health Institute of New Jersey, the Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, and the Stem Cell Institute of New Jersey. The medical school maintains educational programs at the undergraduate, graduate and postgraduate levels for more than 1,500 students on its campuses in New Brunswick, Piscataway, and Camden, and provides continuing education courses for health care professionals and community education programs. 

 

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