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The Time magazine story is a reminder that the Ohio Tobacco and Recovery stages-of-change model is among the nation’s cutting-edge efforts to improve health outcomes among people diagnosed with severe mental illness because it is designed specifically to address the unique needs of this population.

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December 2008

 

TOBACCO & RECOVERY

 

Time magazine article links tobacco use, early death among people with severe mental illness

 

—by Paul M. Kubek and Matthew K. Weiland

 

Columbus, OH--The Ohio Tobacco and Recovery stages-of-change model is among the nation’s cutting-edge efforts to improve health outcomes among people diagnosed with severe mental illness, because it is designed specifically to address the unique needs of this population. A recent story in Time magazine identified the high incidence of tobacco use and dependence among people with severe mental illness as one of the growing health concerns in the United States. Service organizations and systems that are interested in improving health outcomes are encouraged to contact the Ohio Tobacco and Recovery Project (see sidebar).

 

The Time story written by Kate Torgovnick also discusses the high incidence of obesity and diabetes in this population. Torgovnick writes, "Indeed, the causes of physical illness and death among psychiatric patients are much the same as those in other groups--cigarette smoking, obesity, diabetes--and are treatable. The problem is that people with serious mental illness tend to be low on the socioeconomic totem pole and often don't get the best available health care. Frequently, their own doctors pay little heed to their patients' physical health."

 

NASMHPD STUDY ON TOBACCO

Torgovnick refers to a study published in 2006 by the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors (NASMHPD), titled "Morbidity and Mortality in People with Serious Mental Illness". (The report was co-edited by former ODMH Medical Director Dale Svendsen, MD, who is also a member of the advisory committee of the Ohio Tobacco and Recovery Project.) According to Torgovnick, "the report analyzed data from 16 states and found that, on average, people with severe mental illness die 25 years earlier than the general population." Statistics from other studies quoted in the story also include the following:

• 22 percent of the general population smokes
• More than 75 percent of people with severe mental illness are tobacco-dependent
• 44 percent of all cigarettes in the United States are consumed by people with psychiatric histories

 

Get the full story online (click here).

 

LEADERSHIP IN OHIO

Consult these pages to learn more about the Ohio Tobacco and Recovery stages-of-change model:

+ About the project
+ Project partners (advisory council)

 

CITATION

Kate Torgovnick (2008). Why Do the Mentally Ill Die Younger? Time. Wednesday, Dec. 03, 2008. http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1863220,00.html

 



Paul M. Kubek, MA, is director of communications  and Matthew K. Weiland, MA, is senior writer, producer, and new-media specialist at the Center for Evidence-Based Practices at Case Western Reserve University

 


 

ABOUT US | ACADEMIC-COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIP

The Ohio Tobacco and Recovery stages-of-change model is a project of the Center for Evidence Based Practices (EBPs) at Case Western Reserve University, which is a partnership between the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences and Department of Psychiatry at the Case School of Medicine. The Center collaborates with and is supported by the following:

  • Ohio Department of Mental Health (ODMH)
  • Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services (ODADAS)
  • Ohio Rehabilitation Services Commission (ORSC)
  • Ohio Department of Health (ODH)

Co-Directors

  • Lenore A. Kola, Ph.D., associate professor of social work at the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences
  • Robert J. Ronis, M.D., MPH, Douglas Danford Bond Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry, Case School of Medicine

Director of Implementation Services

  • Patrick E. Boyle, MSSA (’89), LISW-S, LICDC

www.centerforebp.case.edu

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| get Time magazine article |

 

 

tobacco filed

 

 

NASMHPD REPORT

Barbara Mauer, MSW, CMC (2006). "Morbidity and Mortality in People with Serious Mental Illness". National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors(NASMHPD) Medical Directors Council: Alexandria, VA.

 

| get pdf |

 

(This report was co-edited by former ODMH Medical Director Dale Svendsen, MD.)

 

 

CONTACT US

Patrick E. Boyle, MSSA, LISW-S, LICDC, director of implementation services

 

patrick.boyle@case.edu