Submitted by nachcinformatics on
Smoking Status and Tobacco Use
Health Status Assessments: Smoking Status
https://www.healthit.gov/isa/taxonomy/term/811/draft-uscdi-v5
NACHC supports HL7 recommendation to change the name of Smoking Status to Tobacco Assessment and Use. Not all tobacco products are combustible like cigarettes. This category should include the noncombustible products as well, such as e-cigarettes. Both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) refer to the broader category of Tobacco Use. Please see:
https://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/resources/publications/factsheets/tobacco.htm
https://www.fda.gov/consumers/minority-health-and-health-equity-resources/tobacco-use
In addition, HL7 recommends duration (number of years of use) and quit date included in the list of example data elements. The duration is used to calculate the number of pack years, which is important for quality measurement and understanding risk. In addition, knowledge about when someone quit smoking helps to understand risk for other diseases.







Submitted by NCQA on
NCQA recommendation for Smoking Status
Recommendation: Expand the scope of the Smoking Status element to include assessment of all tobacco products, aligned to the FDA definition for tobacco use; modify the element name and description to define the expanded element as assessments of a patient’s tobacco use behaviors including use of smoke, vape, chew, or sniff tobacco products. We also recommend adding duration (number of years of use) and quit date in the list of example data elements for comprehensive tobacco use history. Add LOINC terminology to the vocabulary standards.
Rationale: Tobacco assessment and use status encompasses assessment of broader tobacco product use beyond smoked products/cigarettes defined in the existing ‘Smoking Status’ USCDI element. Comprehensive assessment of tobacco use remains a public health priority and is essential to appropriately providing cessation intervention. Intervention should be provided for any tobacco use, not just smoked products/cigarettes. NCQA recently introduced a new HEDIS® measure to incentivize routine tobacco use screening and cessation intervention; this data is routinely captured with standard terminology.