4.7 Editorial Material

Implementing a Nicotine-Free Policy in the United States Military

Journal

CHEST
Volume 161, Issue 3, Pages 845-852

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chest.2021.09.020

Keywords

e-cigarettes; nicotine; smoking; tobacco; vaping

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In December 2019, a US Army training battalion in Virginia decided to ban tobacco and nicotine products after surveying trainee soldiers. The implementation process involved careful planning and data collection to address nicotine dependence and improve the health of soldiers. The intervention model offers comprehensive resources and therapy for long-term quitting.
In December 2019, the command of a US Army Advanced Individual Training battalion on Fort Eustis, Virginia, was briefed on the results of tobacco and nicotine use surveys distributed to trainee soldiers and subsequently decided to ban tobacco and nicotine products in this population. The policy implementation process was thoroughly planned in a joint effort between battalion leadership and the installation military health facility. Data were collected throughout the process that evaluated nicotine product use among trainee soldiers, instructors, and leaders. Preferences on assistance with quitting and views on policy implementation processes also were collected. Comprehensive and multimodal resources and therapy to assist with treatment of dependence of tobacco and nicotine were offered. Although more data are needed on outcomes of this type of intervention, addressing tobacco and nicotine use in the military is long overdue, and our intervention offers a reproducible model to do so. It incorporates education, behavioral resources, and medication therapy with the aim to improve long-term quit rates and to improve the health of soldiers throughout and after their careers.

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