Monday, February 25, 2002
Health plan, state seek to aid smokers
Cessation plan takes new turn
By Cindy Schroeder
The Cincinnati Enquirer
The Kentucky Cabinet for Health Services and CHA Health have formed a partnership to persuade residents of the state with the nation's highest percentage of adult smokers to quit.
The new benefit will offer CHA Health members in 91 of the 120 Kentucky counties nicotine replacement patches on a one-time basis, if they enroll in a health-department approved smoking cessation program.
|
HOW TO ENROLL
|
|
The next 13-week session of the Cooper Clayton smoking cessation program starts April 1.
The free classes will meet weekly from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Mondays at St. Elizabeth Medical Center South in Edgewood.
Facilitators discuss issues that people commonly face when they try to quit smoking including stress management and dealing with physical withdrawal. Participants also offer support for one another.
To enroll, call the Kentucky Cancer Program at (859) 442-3525.
|
The Lexington-based health maintenance organization has about 130,000 members statewide, including 1,541 enrollees from Boone, Kenton and Campbell counties.
Under the agreement with CHA Health, coverage will be limited to 12 weeks, and members must make a co-payment of $25 for each 30 days worth of nicotine patches.
We've never offered smoking cessation supplements before, because if they're used by themselves, they're not very successful, said Dr. Philip Hanus, a director of pharmacy at CHA Health.
The people relapse or they drop out of therapy, he said. But when you combine them with a behavioral management program, we feel that they can be used to their best advantage.
Nine to 10 percent of smokers quit after one year with nicotine replacement therapy only, said Stephanie Vogel, health education supervisor for the Northern Kentucky Independent District Health Department. However, when a smoker combines nicotine replacement therapy with a smoking cessation program, 40 percent of smokers quit for good after one year.
Nearly half of Kentucky's smokers have tried to quit, so we are pleased to see this very positive beginning and encourage other health insurers and employers to join CHA Health, said Dr. Rice C. Leach, commissioner of the Department of Public Health for Kentucky.
Dr. Leach said further incentives are needed because of the high percentage of smokers in Kentucky. A recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that Kentucky leads the United States in the percentage of adults who smoke 30.5 percent.
In Northern Kentucky, the Kentucky Cancer Program, St. Elizabeth Medical Center, the Northern Kentucky health department and the GlaxoSmithKline group sponsor the free, 13-week Cooper Clayton smoking cessation program.
Besides the CHA Health incentive, the sponsors of Northern Kentucky's smoking cessation program offer a few of their own.
With the help of $8,000 in tobacco settlement money, Northern Kentucky's Cooper Clayton program contracts with Kroger's Silverlake pharmacy in Erlanger to provide the initial supply of nicotine replacement patches or gum, Ms. Vogel said.
We give a voucher to participants so that they can get a two-week supply of the patch or gum, Ms. Vogel said. Usually that equals the amount of money they would have spent on cigarettes during that same time. That lets them start saving their money to buy more (nicotine replacement) patches and gum.
A pharmaceutical representative from GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Health Care also provides Northern Kentucky's Cooper Clayton smoking cessation classes with $5 discount coupons for nicotine replacement patches or gum.
30 years of undermining neighborhoods
'Strangler' makes bid for freedom
Big donors wary of try at reform
Plan would trump local gun laws
Projects help motivate Northwest students
Sick child pays price
Ambulances lacking top rescue tools
Butler goes fiber-optic
Enquirer wins eight Ohio top-photo awards
Film crew from GMA tails cow
Health plan, state seek to aid smokers
Jail inmate indicted in police officer shooting
Musical variety brings fame
Proposal could curb consequences of mail schemes
Tax levy watchdog may need second opinion
Thousands of cat lovers converge at convention
Tristate A.M. Report
Road numbers odd mix
Some Good News