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Almost half the world's child population is exposed to
tobacco smoke at home. On p 337 Hovell et al report the effects of a
behavioural counselling programme for smoking mothers to decrease their
children's exposure to environmental tobacco smoke. The study showed
that counselled mothers reported a significantly greater decrease in
their children's exposure than did control mothers. Children's urine
cotinine showed a slight decrease after counselling, compared with
a large increase among controls. The authors conclude that counselling
is effective and that similar programmes in medical and social services
might protect millions of children from environmental tobacco smoke in
their homes.
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+