Health

Volume 2, Issue 11 (November 2010)

ISSN Print: 1949-4998   ISSN Online: 1949-5005

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.81  Citations  

Residential smoking restrictions are not associated with reduced child SHS exposure in a baseline sample of low-income, urban African Americans

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 281KB)  PP. 1264-1271  
DOI: 10.4236/health.2010.211188    4,306 Downloads   8,241 Views  Citations

Affiliation(s)

.

ABSTRACT

Second hand smoke exposure (SHSe) relates to many chronic and acute illnesses. Low income African American (AA) maternal smokers and their children have disproportionately higher tobacco-use and child SHSe-related morbidity and mortality than other populations. While public health officials promote residential smoking restrictions to reduce SHSe and promote smoking cessation, little is known about the impact of restrictions in changing smoking behavior and SHSe in this population. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine associations between residential smoking restrictions, maternal smoking, and young children’s SHSe in the context of other factors known to influence low income AA mothers’ smoking behavior. For this study, we used cross-sectional, baseline data from 307 AA maternal smokers’ pre-treatment interviews completed as part of a subsequent behavioral counseling trial to reduce their young (< 4 years old) children’s SHSe. Residential smoking restriction was dichotomized as 0 = no restrictions and 1 = some restrictions. Child urine cotinine provided a biomarker of SHSe. Mothers reported cigarettes/day smoked, cigarettes/day exposed to child, and intention to quit. Multivariate regressions modeled effects of restriction as the primary predictor of smoking and exposure outcomes. Maternal smoking patterns such as cigarettes per day (β = 0.52, p < 0.001) and years smoked (β = ?0.11; p = 0.03) along with presence of additional smokers in the home (β = 0.10; p = 0.04), but not residential restriction (β = ?0.09, p = 0.10), predicted reported SHSe. Restriction did not relate to baby cotinine or maternal intention to quit. Thus, residential smoking restrictions may contribute to efforts to reduce children’s SHSe and promote maternal smoking change; but alone, may not constitute a sufficient intervention to protect children. Multi-level intervention approaches that include SHSe-reduction residential smoking policies plus support and cessation assistance for smokers may be a necessary approach to smoke-free home adoption and adherence.

Share and Cite:

Collins, B. , Ibrahim, J. , Hovell, M. , Tolley, N. , Nair, U. , Jaffe, K. , Zanis, D. and Audrain-McGovern, J. (2010) Residential smoking restrictions are not associated with reduced child SHS exposure in a baseline sample of low-income, urban African Americans. Health, 2, 1264-1271. doi: 10.4236/health.2010.211188.

Cited by

[1] Clear aligners-A review.
2019
[2] Gastric cancer-A review.
2019
[3] Reducing Harm of Passive Smoking Exposure among Children
International Journal of Health Sciences and Research, 2018
[4] Trait Persistence Moderates the Association between Gender and Change in Smoking Urge Across Repeated Cue Exposure Trials
Journal of Smoking Cessation, 2018
[5] Reducing Underserved Children's Exposure to Tobacco Smoke: A Randomized Counseling Trial With Maternal Smokers
American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2015
[6] Environmental tobacco smoke exposure among smokers and non-smokers receiving outpatient substance abuse treatment
Addictive behaviors, 2014
[7] The Parent–Child Dyad and Risk Perceptions Among Parents Who Quit Smoking
American journal of preventive medicine, 2014
[8] Kids Safe and Smokefree (KiSS): a randomized controlled trial of a multilevel intervention to reduce secondhand tobacco smoke exposure in children
BMC public health, 2013
[9] Factors associated with maternal depressive symptoms among low-income, African American smokers enrolled in a secondhand smoke reduction programme
Mental health in family medicine, 2012
[10] A randomized controlled trial of a family intervention in reducing secondhand smoke exposure to infants under 18-months
2011
[11] Home smoking bans among US households with children and smokers: opportunities for intervention
American journal of preventive medicine, 2011
[12] Unexpected benefits: pathways from smoking restrictions in the home to psychological well-being and distress among urban black and Puerto Rican Americans
Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 2011

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.