The American Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout takes place on Thursday, November 15. This annual event encourages people to stop smoking cigarettes and using other tobacco products for one entire day. It also encourages people to use the day to make a plan to quit for good or to begin the process of quitting. This year marks the 37th anniversary of the Smokeout.
The Center for Evidence-Based Practices at Case Western Reserve University is using the Great American Smokeout to remind health and behavioral health professionals (e.g., doctors, nurses, social workers, addictions counselors, housing specialists) to encourage people with serious mental illness and substance use disorders to consider reducing and eliminating the use of tobacco products.
Begin helping people with mental illness and substance use disorders take important steps toward quitting tobacco:
Ask each person you see in your daily clinical practice if he or she uses cigarettes or other tobacco products.+ 1 More Thing ...
For additional practical action steps, consult our Center's TRAC Getting-Started Guide.
Our Center encourages service organizations to incorporate tobacco recovery into their integrated primary and behavioral healthcare initiatives and Health Homes (learn more). |
Our Center encourages organizations to incorporate tobacco recovery into their integrated primary and behavioral healthcare initiatives and Health Homes, because systematic tobacco interventions are important for a number of reasons:
Tobacco Epidemic
Health Consequences
Treatment Consequences & Tips
![]() TRAC integrates tobacco treatment with existing primary and behavioral healthcare approaches (learn more). |
"Tobacco: Recovery Across the Continuum" (TRAC) is a stage-based motivational service model developed by our Center to help people diagnosed with serious mental illness and/or substance use disorders reduce and eventually eliminate the use of tobacco products. TRAC integrates tobacco treatment with existing primary and behavioral healthcare approaches. It equips service providers with strategies to connect with people in all "stages of change," including those who are either unaware of or ambivalent about the benefits of reducing and eliminating tobacco use as well as those who are ready to reduce and become tobacco-free.
According to the American Cancer Society website, tobacco use remains the single largest preventable cause of disease and premature death in the United States, yet about 43.8 million Americans still smoke cigarettes (nearly one in every five adults). As of 2010, there were also
Learn more at the American Cancer Society web site.