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Melbourne F Hovell a Center for Behavioral Epidemiology and
Community Health (C-BEACH), Graduate School of Public Health, San Diego
State University, San Diego, CA 92182, USA, b Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, National Center for Environmental Health, Division of
Laboratory Sciences, Atlanta, GA 30341-3724, USA
Correspondence to: M F
Hovell behepi{at}rohan.sdsu.edu
Objective:
To test the efficacy of behavioural
counselling for smoking mothers in reducing young children's exposure
to environmental tobacco smoke.
Design:
Randomised double blind controlled trial.
Setting:
Low income homes in San Diego county, California.
Participants:
108 ethnically diverse mothers who
exposed their children (aged <4 years) to tobacco smoke in the home.
Intervention:
Mothers were given seven counselling
sessions over three months.
Main outcome measures:
Children's reported exposure
to environmental tobacco smoke from mothers in the home and from all
sources; children's cotinine concentrations in urine.
Results:
Mothers' reports of children's exposure to their smoke in the home declined in the counselled group from 27.30 cigarettes/week at baseline, to 4.47 at three months, to 3.66 at 12 months and in the controls from 24.56, to 12.08, to 8.38. The
differences between the groups by time were significant (P=0.002).
Reported exposure to smoke from all sources showed similar declines,
with significant differences between groups by time (P=0.008). At 12 months, the reported exposure in the counselled group was 41.2% that
of controls for mothers' smoke (95% confidence interval 34.2% to
48.3%) and was 45.7% (38.4% to 53.0%) that of controls for all
sources of smoke. Children's mean urine cotinine concentrations
decreased slightly in the counselled group from 10.93 ng/ml at baseline
to 10.47 ng/ml at 12 months but increased in the controls from 9.43 ng/ml to 17.47 ng/ml (differences between groups by time P=0.008). At
12 months the cotinine concentration in the counselled group was 55.6%
(48.2% to 63.0%) that of controls.
Conclusions:
Counselling was effective in reducing
children's exposure to environmental tobacco smoke. Similar
counselling in medical and social services might protect millions of
children from environmental tobacco smoke in their homes.
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