Smoking bans in mental health hospitals in Japan: barriers to implementation.

Ann Gen Psychiatry

Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Nara Medical University, 840 Shijocho Kashihara, Nara, 634-8522 Japan.

Published: October 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Smoking rates are higher and cessation rates are lower among patients with mental disorders compared to the general population, leading to challenges in enforcing total smoking bans in Japanese mental health hospitals.
  • A survey of 1242 hospital directors revealed that only 24% had total smoking bans, while many facilities still had designated smoking areas out of concern for patients' psychiatric symptoms and potential surreptitious smoking.
  • Despite these concerns, the study found that barriers to smoking bans can be effectively addressed through staff education and improved cleanliness around hospital premises, indicating that implementing such bans is feasible.

Article Abstract

Background: A number of studies have reported that smoking rates are higher and smoking cessation rates are lower in patients with mental disorders than in the general population. Despite the harmful effects of smoking, implementing total smoking bans in mental health hospitals is difficult. We investigate the status of smoking bans and the barriers to the implementation of total smoking bans in Japanese mental health hospitals.

Methods: A questionnaire survey was administered to the directors of 1242 Japanese mental health hospitals in March 2013.

Results: Forty-nine percent (n = 612) of the hospital directors responded. Of these, 24 % implemented total smoking bans and 14 % limited the bans to hospital buildings. In 66 and 68 % of the remaining hospitals, smoking rooms were located in open and closed wards, respectively, and completely separate from nonsmoking areas. Hospitals that had not implemented total smoking bans were concerned that introducing a total ban would exacerbate patients' psychiatric symptoms (46 %) or increase the incidence of surreptitious smoking (65 %). However, of the hospitals that had implemented total smoking bans, only 2 and 30 % identified "aggravation of psychiatric symptoms" and "increased surreptitious smoking" as disadvantages, respectively. The other concerns regarding the implementation of total smoking bans were staff opposition (21 %) and incidence of smoking around hospital grounds (46 %). These concerns were overcome by educating staff about smoking and cleaning the area around the hospital.

Conclusions: There are some barriers to implementing total smoking bans in Japanese mental health hospitals. However, our study indicates that implementation of total smoking bans in mental health hospitals was minimally problematic and that barriers to the implementation of smoking bans could be overcome. As the current number of hospitals that have implemented total smoking bans is low in Japan, more hospitals should introduce total smoking bans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4625877PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12991-015-0076-9DOI Listing

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