4.6 Article

Reducing Underserved Children's Exposure to Tobacco Smoke A Randomized Counseling Trial With Maternal Smokers

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
Volume 49, Issue 4, Pages 534-544

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2015.03.008

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute at the NIH [CA105183, CA93756]

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Introduction: Addressing maternal smoking and child tobacco smoke exposure is a public health priority. Standard care advice and self-help materials to help parents reduce child tobacco smoke exposure is not sufficient to promote change in underserved populations. We tested the efficacy of a behavioral counseling approach with underserved maternal smokers to reduce infant's and preschooler's tobacco smoke exposure. Design: A two-arm randomized trial: enhanced behavior counseling (experimental) versus enhanced standard care (control). Assessment staff members were blinded. Setting/participants: Three hundred randomized maternal smokers were recruited from low-income urban communities. Participants had a child aged <4 years exposed to two or more maternal cigarettes/day at baseline. Intervention: Philadelphia Family Rules for Establishing Smokefree Homes (FRESH) included 16 weeks of counseling. Using a behavioral shaping approach within an individualized cognitive-behavioral therapy framework, counseling reinforced efforts to adopt increasingly challenging tobacco smoke exposure-protective behaviors with the eventual goal of establishing a smokefree home. Main outcome measures: Primary outcomes were end-of-treatment child cotinine and reported tobacco smoke exposure (maternal cigarettes/day exposed). Secondary outcomes were end-of-treatment 7-day point-prevalence self-reported cigarettes smoked/day and bioverified quit status. Results: Participation in FRESH behavioral counseling was associated with lower child cotinine (beta=-0.18, p=0.03) and reported tobacco smoke exposure (beta=-0.57, p=0.03) at the end of treatment. Mothers in behavioral counseling smoked fewer cigarettes/day (beta=-1.84, p=0.03) and had higher bioverified quit rates compared with controls (13.8% vs 1.9%, chi(2)=10.56, p < 0.01). There was no moderating effect of other smokers living at home. Conclusions: FRESH behavioral counseling reduces child tobacco smoke exposure and promotes smoking quit rates in a highly distressed and vulnerable population. (C) 2015 American Journal of Preventive Medicine

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