
Good tobacco harm reduction counselling is respectful, factual, and practical.
Good tobacco harm reduction counselling starts with a clear principle: adults who smoke deserve accurate information, compassionate support, and realistic options. Shame rarely helps people change. Trust often does.
In Kenya, many adults who smoke have tried to quit more than once. Some have reduced for a short period, some have used willpower alone, and others have never been offered structured support. A good counselling conversation recognises those efforts and turns them into a plan.
Start With the Patient's Goal
Not every person arrives ready to quit immediately. Some want to stop smoking inside the home. Some want to reduce the number of cigarettes they smoke each day. Some want to understand nicotine replacement therapy. Others simply want to stop coughing or protect their children from smoke.
Asking "What would you like to change first?" creates a more useful conversation than beginning with a lecture. The provider can then match advice to the patient's readiness.
Explain the Main Risk Clearly
The greatest harm from smoking comes from inhaling smoke produced by burning tobacco. Smoke contains toxic gases and particles that damage the lungs, heart, blood vessels, and many other organs. Nicotine is addictive, but combustion is the major driver of smoking-related disease.
Counselling should make this distinction carefully. It should not suggest that nicotine is harmless, and it should not encourage non-smokers to use nicotine. But it should help adults who smoke understand why quitting cigarettes or moving away from combustible tobacco can substantially reduce risk.
The Very Brief Advice Framework
HRSK supports brief, repeatable tobacco conversations that fit into busy clinical and pharmacy settings:
- Ask: "Do you currently smoke or use any tobacco product?"
- Advise: "The best step for your health is to stop smoking. There are tools that can help."
- Act: Offer support, medication guidance, follow-up, or referral.
This can take less than five minutes, but it creates a clear invitation for change. Repeated over time, it can be more powerful than a single long counselling session.
Offer Practical Options
- Nicotine replacement therapy: Patches, gum, or lozenges can reduce withdrawal symptoms and cravings.
- Trigger planning: Patients can identify when they smoke most and prepare alternatives for those moments.
- Smoke-free homes: Even before quitting, moving smoking outdoors protects children and non-smokers.
- Follow-up support: A return visit, phone call, or pharmacy check-in improves accountability.
- Referral: Patients with heavy dependence, mental health concerns, or repeated relapse may need more structured care.
Common Counselling Mistakes
Tobacco counselling can fail when it becomes moralising, vague, or unrealistic. Patients may disengage if they feel judged or if the advice is simply "stop smoking" without a pathway. Good counselling avoids:
- Using fear alone as the main message
- Ignoring withdrawal symptoms and dependence
- Assuming one failed quit attempt means the patient is not serious
- Providing product advice without checking medical history or current medication
- Forgetting to schedule follow-up
"The best tobacco counselling is both honest and hopeful: honest about the risk of smoking, hopeful about the fact that change is possible even after many failed attempts."
HRSK's Call to Health Workers
Clinicians, pharmacists, nurses, and community health workers can all make tobacco harm reduction part of routine practice. The conversation does not have to be perfect. It must be respectful, factual, and repeated.
Every adult who smokes should leave a health encounter knowing that support exists, that quitting is possible, and that reducing exposure to smoke is one of the most important health decisions they can make.