2022
Examining Tobacco Treatment Perceptions and Barriers Among Black vs. Non-Black Adults Attending Lung Cancer Screening
Bold KW, Cannon S, Ford BB, Neveu S, Sather P, Toll BA, Fucito LM. Examining Tobacco Treatment Perceptions and Barriers Among Black vs. Non-Black Adults Attending Lung Cancer Screening. Cancer Prevention Research 2022, 15: 327-333. PMID: 35063942, PMCID: PMC9064926, DOI: 10.1158/1940-6207.capr-21-0398.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLung cancer screeningCancer screeningTobacco treatmentWithdrawal symptomsRace/ethnicityTreatment perceptionsUS Preventive Services Task ForceHealth disparitiesAnnual lung cancerSmilow Cancer HospitalYale-New HavenCharacteristics of patientsHigh-risk patientsHigh-risk populationNon-Hispanic blacksTobacco-related health disparitiesAddress health disparitiesPatient characteristicsSmoking historyBlack patientsCancer HospitalLung cancerHigh riskPatientsSmoking
2020
Impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on telehealth research in cancer prevention and care: A call to sustain telehealth advances
Park ER, Chiles C, Cinciripini PM, Foley KL, Fucito LM, Haas JS, Joseph AM, Ostroff JS, Rigotti NA, Shelley DR, Taylor KL, Zeliadt SB, Toll BA, Group T. Impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on telehealth research in cancer prevention and care: A call to sustain telehealth advances. Cancer 2020, 127: 334-338. PMID: 33048350, PMCID: PMC7675475, DOI: 10.1002/cncr.33227.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2016
Pairing smoking‐cessation services with lung cancer screening: A clinical guideline from the Association for the Treatment of Tobacco Use and Dependence and the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco
Fucito LM, Czabafy S, Hendricks PS, Kotsen C, Richardson D, Toll BA, Committee F. Pairing smoking‐cessation services with lung cancer screening: A clinical guideline from the Association for the Treatment of Tobacco Use and Dependence and the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. Cancer 2016, 122: 1150-1159. PMID: 26916412, PMCID: PMC4828323, DOI: 10.1002/cncr.29926.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLung cancer screeningSmoking cessation interventionUS Preventive Services Task ForceLow-dose computed tomographyCancer screeningSmoking cessationTobacco useEvidence-based smoking cessation interventionsAge 55Evidence-based smoking cessation treatmentLung cancer screening participantsAnnual lung cancerPatients age 55Pack-year historySmoking cessation effortsSmoking cessation servicesSmoking cessation treatmentHigh-risk groupEvidence-based treatmentsEvidence-based behavioral strategiesScreening participantsLung cancerClinical guidelinesClinical recommendationsPremature mortality
2014
“Quitting Smoking Will Benefit Your Health”: The Evolution of Clinician Messaging to Encourage Tobacco Cessation
Toll BA, Rojewski AM, Duncan LR, Latimer-Cheung AE, Fucito LM, Boyer JL, O'Malley SS, Salovey P, Herbst RS. “Quitting Smoking Will Benefit Your Health”: The Evolution of Clinician Messaging to Encourage Tobacco Cessation. Clinical Cancer Research 2014, 20: 301-309. PMID: 24436474, PMCID: PMC3927319, DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-13-2261.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsHumansLung NeoplasmsPhysician's RoleSmoking CessationText MessagingTobacco Use CessationConceptsCancer-related deathHeart diseaseTobacco useLung cancer-related deathsSubgroups of smokersBurden of cancerModerators of treatmentAdult patientsCessation interventionsSmoking cessationTobacco cessationQuitting smokingPreventable deathsGain-framed messagesSmokingTobacco productsCancerDiseaseDeathPatientsLungStrokeCessationHealthFuture studies