Patients who smoke cigarettes suffer increased postoperative morbidity. A prospective, controlled trial was designed to evaluate the effectiveness of written pre‐operative advice to stop smoking before admission for elective surgery and to record the duration of abstinence immediately before the operation. Although the advice was ineffective in persuading patients to stop smoking, it was associated with a reduction in the amount of tobacco consumed. Nicotine and carbon monoxide have important short‐term adverse effects but 15% of all patients continued to smoke within an hour of surgery. If patients are unable to give up cigarette smoking completely, it is still worthwhile stopping on admission to hospital. Copyright © 1993, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved
CITATION STYLE
Munday, I. T., Desai, P. M., Marshall, C. A., Jones, R. M., Phillips, M. ‐L, & Rosen, M. (1993). The effectiveness of pre‐operative advice to stop smoking: a prospective controlled trial. Anaesthesia, 48(9), 816–818. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.1993.tb07600.x
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