Date of Conferral
2-5-2026
Degree
Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP)
School
Nursing
Advisor
Stacy Lourie
Abstract
This project is a quality improvement initiative conducted in a rural clinic in South Carolina, focused on staff education and implementation of practices to improve tobacco use screening and referral for patients without a primary care provider. The practice problem is inconsistent screening for tobacco use and identification of patients without a primary care provider, resulting in missed opportunities for prevention and continuity of care. Addressing this issue is vital, as nurses play a key role in health promotion and connecting patients to smoking cessation resources. The practice-focused question of the DNP project asks whether empowering clinic nurses and advanced practice registered nurses through targeted staff education improves identification of tobacco using patients without a primary care provider. The purpose of this doctoral project is to implement and evaluate a staff education intervention that strengthens nursing practice. Descriptive and comparative analytical strategies were used, including analysis of pre- and post-education survey data, to evaluate changes in nursing knowledge. Nine of ten invited (90%) completed pre- and post-assessments. Post-test scores improved for seven participants (78%) and remained unchanged for two participants (22%), indicating improvement in tobacco-use screening and referral knowledge. The major outcome of this project is a QR-code–based staff education module focused on improving staff ability to identify tobacco-using patients without a primary care provider and make appropriate referrals. The implications for nursing practice include strengthening nurses’ roles in preventive care and improving access to smoking cessation resources.
Recommended Citation
Rich, Candra, "Staff Education Project Staff Education to Improve Tobacco-Use Screening and Referral for Patients Without a Primary Care Provide" (2026). Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies. 19075.
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/19075
