Bristol Post

‘Truly smoke-free’ Hospital could introduce vaping zone after ban fails

- Amanda CAMERON Local democracy reporter amanda.cameron@reachplc.com

VAPING areas could be introduced at a large Bristol hospital in a bid to make the site “truly smoke-free”.

Southmead Hospital in north Bristol is a designated ‘smoke-free’ site, in line with NHS guidelines, but many people ignore the ban.

In 2017, North Bristol NHS Trust, which runs the hospital, bowed to public pressure and introduced two smoking shelters outside the main entrance and maternity ward.

Now it has admitted its ‘smokefree’ policy is not working, and has said it is re-thinking its approach, with the possible introducti­on of designated outdoor areas where people can smoke e-cigarettes and the sale or provision of vapes on site.

Kathryn Hamilton, a public health registrar at the trust, said a multidisci­plinary working group at the trust was reviewing its smokenot free policy in an effort to make the hospital grounds “more truly smoke-free”.

“Options that we’re considerin­g will include designated outdoor vaping areas, selling e-cigarettes commercial­ly, looking at [behavioura­l] signs, nudges, and crucially, underpinni­ng that with training for staff in very brief [quit] advice and conversati­ons around smoking,” she told a meeting of Bristol health leaders on October 20.

She said the extent to which people ignored the current smoke-free policy was revealed in a survey of more than 500 hospital staff, visitors and patients over summer.

Some 70 per cent of respondent­s said they saw people smoking at the hospital “most days or every day”, members of the Bristol health and wellbeing board heard.

“What we found is that overwhelmi­ngly people know that we’re a smoke-free site,” she said. “The problem is that we actually do have people smoking on site and most people most days see people following the policy.

“In our consultati­on, we brought out hotspots where this is happening and this wasn’t a particular surprise to those people who work at the trust and knew about these.”

The consultati­on survey found around two-thirds of respondent­s backed the introducti­on of designated outdoor vaping areas, but the idea of the hospital selling or providing vapes was more contentiou­s.

Some non-smokers were “very vehemently” opposed to vaping on hospital grounds, seeing it as unhealthy, members heard.

But Dr Hamilton said: “We’ve got a lot of evolving evidence that e-cigarettes or vaping is a really powerful tool to help quit smoking, and we’ve got more and more evidence that it’s dramatical­ly safer than smoking and also seems to really work for people trying to quit.”

The survey also found good support for other changes the trust is thinking of making to its smokefree policy, such as better signage, she said.

Tim Keen, associate director of strategy at the trust, said smoking was a “very polarising” issue and some of the existing non-smoking signs at the hospital were “terrible” and “quite aggressive”.

He said one with the slogan “Put your fag out or we’ll put you out” had “really got people’s backs up”.

The trust is holding focus groups to work out “how we get those messages right”, Mr Keen said.

“There’s lots of things we can learn and change our approach on,” he said. “This is about treating people who’ve got a dependency and helping reduce harms.”

Dr Hamilton added the trust was also planning training for staff in how to avoid conflict when having difficult conversati­ons with patients or visitors about smoking.

The initiative is part of a longterm plan by the NHS to treat smoking addiction by identifyin­g smokers in hospitals and helping them to quit.

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