- Help patients keep their eyes on the ball—and safe from injury
- How to avert an eye care crisis
- Case study: Avoid blurring line between clinical practice and research in optometry
- As technology turns, sports vision optometrist pivots
- Vision-friendly holiday gifts for children
- What you say versus what they hear: Talking contact lenses
- Identify signs of abuse
- excercise may prevent eye diseases
- Tips for an eye-healthy Thanksgiving feast
- protecting patients eye summer
- Lutein zeaxanthin reaffirmed over beta-carotene in AREDS2
- Diabetes Alert Day
- Day of unplugging
- 2021 Telehealth Summit
- Performance evaluation
- wearing contacts safely during COVID-19
- Recharging the retina
- Vitamin A good for the eyes
- Children device use and Myopia
- Physical distancing masks and eye protection
- COVID-19 infection control refresher
- doctor google online symptom checkers
- COVID-19 digital eyestrain
- The many benefits of the Mediterranean Diet
- Spring Break Healthy Contact Lens Hygiene
- CPR Certification Heart Month
- healthy makeup habits
- checking blood pressure
- healthy eyes recipe-eye-friendly nutrients
- best holiday gifts for childrens vision development
- winter weather tips
- 5 things to ask your older patients about driving
- eating for your eyes
- Vision therapy reading scores
- secondhand smoke could harm childrens eyes
- AOA resources can help patients see with less daylight
- dark chocolate does not improve eyesight
- Pumpkin nutrition benefits
- Teenager loses vision after a steady diet of French fries
- Systolic versus diastolic readings blood pressure
- Increase fitting success with better communication
- Contact Lens Health Week
- Mixing systemic and ocular pediatric medications
- The wonderful healing properties of amniotic membranes
- Optometry and social work
- Smoking and Eye Health
- Novel contact lens design tracks IOP for continuous 24-hour period
- Blue-light hype or much ado about nothing
- Help Patients summer swimming
- Toys and games nice and naughty for vision development
- 21st-century optometric care
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- How optometry can prevent serious harm from falls
- Help patients see the light when driving at night
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- Video-game vision therapy
- Olympics pique interest in winter eye care for athletes
- prevent eye-related injuries from sports and recreation
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- AOA releases new evidence based guideline for pediatric eye care
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- Diets and eye health
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- Children and Contact Lenses
- kids vision
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- Study underscores optometrys role in improving aging patients quality of life
- Wildfires and Ocular Health
- When driving becomes dangerous
- Blinded by video games
- Blue Light and Kids Sleep
- Kids and Devices
- Diabetes patients perspective
- Vapor Study
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- National Sunglasses Day
- How to examine patients with special needs
Cigarette use down but not out: How optometry can help
November 20, 2019
The Great American Smokeout, Nov. 21, encourages smokers to start today toward a smoke-free life. Doctors of optometry can help be that catalyst and the AOA offers resources for starting the dialogue.
Continuing a decades-long trend, cigarette smoking fell to an all-time low among Americans, but health officials temper the anti-smoking progress with a rise in new tobacco products.
Published in the Centers' for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC's) Nov. 15 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), the aggregate data shows a nearly two-thirds decline in adult cigarette smoking prevalence since 1965, falling to only 13.7% in 2018. The number "represents a major public health success," the CDC says, as other indicators of smoking cessation (quit attempts, recent cessation and quit ratio) are equally showing marked improvements in the past 9 years.
Still considered the leading cause of preventable disease, disability and death in the United States, smoking causes an estimated 480,000 deaths every year—or about 1 in every 5 deaths—while another 16 million Americans live with smoking-related diseases. Although cigarette smoking numbers are dramatically declining, the MMWR notes clear disparities in tobacco use among certain populations.
Who's still smoking?
Males (25.8%) were more likely to report current tobacco use than females (14.1%), as were adults 25-44 years old (23.8%), 45-64 years old (21.3%) and 18-24 years old (17.1%). Additionally, current tobacco use was higher among persons with annual household incomes of less than $35,000 than those in higher income groups and was reported higher among non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaska Native adults (32.3%), non-Hispanic multiracial adults (25.4%) and non-Hispanic white adults (21.9%). By geographic region, current smoking use was reported as:
- 23.6% Midwest.
- 21.4% South.
- 17.5% Northeast.
- 15.3% West.
While traditional cigarette use is declining, the CDC notes small increases in adult e-cigarette (vaping) use (2.8% in 2017 to 3.2% in 2018) even as the prevalence of e-cigarette use among high school students soars (20.8% who report past 30-day usage). That trend is especially concerning as health officials scramble to warn the public against black market or tampered vaping products associated with a deadly, multi-state outbreak of lung injury.
Aside from e-cigarette/vaping product use associated with lung injury, little is known about the long-term use of e-cigarettes, often marketed as a smoking cessation device. Still, quitting smoking altogether at any age is beneficial for health.
Access AOA resources during Great American Smokeout
Among current adult smokers, nearly 70% want to quit and nearly half tried to do so in the past year. That's why an event like the American Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout, Nov. 21, can help make a difference, encouraging those smokers to find the help and support necessary for quitting.
As primary eye care providers, doctors of optometry have an opportunity to educate their patients and direct them toward smoking cessation resources. In fact, the AOA's evidence-based clinical practice guideline, Comprehensive Adult Eye and Vision Examination, generally recommends counseling patients on smoking cessation and education, and suggests doctors be alert for new information.
The guideline states: "Eye doctors should ask about and document their patients' smoking status and inform them about the benefits to their eyes, vision and overall health, through smoking cessation ... counseling and educating patients about the potential impact of smoking may help maintain ocular and systemic health, and visual function."
Doctors seeking additional information for helping facilitate these patient conversations can make use of these AOA resources:
- AOA's "Smoking, Vaping and Your Eyes" fact sheet
- AOA's "Eye See Tobacco Free" pamphlet
- Patient education resouce, The Great American Smokeout—Quit for life
Additionally, consider these other resources for discussing or assisting smoking cessation conversations with patients:
- Great American Smokeout tools and resources
- Smoking cessation resources at smokefree.gov
- "Quitting Smoking" fact sheets from CDC
Read more about how the AOA's getting involved in a public health initiative to curb smoking rates.