Cessation Materials for Tobacco Control Programs

At a glance

The Office on Smoking and Health (OSH) works with tobacco control programs to protect the public's health from the harmful effects of tobacco use. Resources and materials on a range of topics can help tobacco control programs understand best practices and implement tobacco cessation interventions.

Cessation resources

OSH helps tobacco control programs develop, conduct, and support strategic efforts to help people quit and reduce disease, death, and the huge cost of tobacco use.1 The following resources will help inform tobacco control programs and assist with tobacco cessation interventions and implementation.

Cessation best practices

Cessation insurance coverage

Broad resources

  • —Evidence for tobacco cessation insurance coverage, best practices for designing coverage, and current status of cessation coverage.
  • —Explains the Affordable Care Act provision on evidence-based preventive services for tobacco cessation coverage (see question 5).

Working with Medicaid

  • —Enrollment numbers and information on policies and programs.
  • —Medicaid coverage for tobacco cessation treatments and barriers to accessing treatments by state for 2008 and 2018.
  • STATE System Medicaid coverage of tobacco cessation treatments fact sheet—Map and table of current state Medicaid coverage.
  • —State Medicaid program support for tobacco cessation activities.

Working with Medicaid: state examples

Health systems change

Broad health systems change for tobacco cessation resources

  • Best Practices User Guide: Cessation—Addresses how to implement health systems change, increase insurance coverage for cessation treatment, and support state quitlines. See section titled, Promoting Health Systems Change (p 11–19).
  • and —Resources to help increase the reach and effectiveness of tobacco cessation interventions.

Clinical implementation resources

State surveys of health plans

  • —Sample survey questions used by Medicaid and public health programs on tobacco cessation benefits.

Quitlines

  • —Visual timeline of the evolution of state quitlines during 2004–2019.
  • —Hours of operation, telephone and online services, medications, eligibility, and state quitline referral programs.

Youth cessation

  • —Recommendation that primary care clinicians provide interventions. This includes education or brief counseling, to prevent starting tobacco use among school-aged children and adolescents.
  • PHS Guideline Recommendations: How to Help Adolescents Quit Smoking—Recommendations to provide adolescents who smoke with counseling interventions to aid them in quitting smoking.

Cessation and health equity

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs—2014. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; 2014. /tobacco/stateandcommunity/guides/pdfs/2014/comprehensive.pdf