In the UK smoking remains the single biggest cause of preventable morbidity, mortality and health inequalities. Smoking cessation impacts a number of key priority areas including cancer, respiratory, health inequalities, mental health and women’s health. Helping people tackle their tobacco dependence is a key component of the NHS Long Term Plan and forms the NHS’s contribution to wider government action to deliver the 2030 ambition for a smoke free generation. The Long-Term Plan commits to providing NHS funded tobacco dependency treatment to all people admitted to hospital who smoke, pregnant women and people with serious mental illness in long term care.
Topic paused to clarify its scope.
 
Status Suspended
Technology type Device
Decision Selected
Reason for decision Anticipate the topic will be of importance to patients, carers, professionals, commissioners and the health of the public to ensure clinical benefit is realised, inequalities in use addressed, and help them make the best use of NHS resources
Description Smoking continues to be the leading cause of preventable illness, death and health inequalities in the UK ( GRIFT,2021). In 2022, 12.9% of people aged 18 years and over smoked in the UK (ONS, 2022). In England, around 74,600 deaths were attributed to smoking in 2019 (ONS, 2022). Smoking harms nearly every organ in the body, increasing the risk of various cancers, respiratory diseases, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, eye disease and dementia. Smoking in pregnancy is also a significant risk for a range of poor outcomes including miscarriage, stillbirth, premature birth, neonatal complications, low birth weight and sudden infant death syndrome. It is also closely associated with poor mental health (OHID,2022). Smoking has a significant economic impact in England costing, £17.3 billion annually, with a major financial burden on the NHS and Social care. Smoking-related hospital admissions and primary care treatments cost £1.9 billion per year. Smoking also causes £14 billion in productivity losses due to unemployment, reduced earnings, and premature deaths (ASH, 2023). Over 500,000 hospital admissions are directly attributed to smoking in England ( PHE, 2020). One in four patients in a hospital bed is a smoker and smokers also see their GP 35% more than non-smokers (PHE, 2017). Doctors are expected to protect, promote and maintain the health, safety and wellbeing of the public, including smoking cessation ( GMC ). Adults admitted to the hospital overnight and identified as smokers are offered Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT) in the hospital, and then referred to a community step-down provider (usually the local Stop Smoking Service) upon discharge. But, uptake for this additional support is low due to the local availability of services or personal circumstances (busy lifestyle, caring responsibilities). Digital technologies provide an opportunity to reach a large population of people with smoking cessation support. Digital technologies for smoking cessation may be able to provide behavioural and motivational support and advice to quit smoking and reduce tobacco dependence. In this early value assessment, NICE will identify and evaluate innovative digital technologies for smoking cessation in secondary care patients. It will review the evidence that is available and assess the potential clinical and cost-effectiveness of the technologies, as well as identify evidence gaps to help direct evidence generation.

Project Team

Project lead Deonee Stanislaus

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Timeline

Key events during the development of the guidance:

Date Update
09 April 2025 Topic paused to clarify its scope. We are committed to provide all stakeholders with the most accurate and comprehensive information. As a result, the dates previously shared with you are now void. We will circulate new information as soon as possible and ensure that you receive ample notice of the new dates once they are set. Thank you for your understanding and patience.
09 April 2025 Suspended. Topic paused to clarify its scope.
04 April 2025 Scoping Workshop
06 February 2025 - 06 March 2025 Specialist committee member recruitment
06 February 2025 Topic start date
06 February 2025 Stakeholder registration opens
06 February 2025 In progress. Launch
19 November 2024 Awaiting development. Status change linked to Topic Selection Decision being set to Selected