Emmons K M, Hammond S K, Fava J L, Velicer W F, Evans J L, Monroe A D
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Pediatrics. 2001 Jul;108(1):18-24. doi: 10.1542/peds.108.1.18.
Passive smoke exposure among children is widespread in the United States; estimates suggest that almost 40% of children who are younger than 5 years live with a smoker. Few randomized studies of passive smoke exposure reduction among children have been conducted, and the impact of interventions that have been evaluated has been limited. The objective of this study was to determine whether a motivational intervention for smoking parents of young children will lead to reduced household passive smoke exposure.
Project KISS (Keeping Infants Safe From Smoke), a theory-driven exposure reduction intervention targeting low-income families with young children, was a randomized controlled study in which participants-smoking parents/caregivers (N = 291) who had children who were younger than 3 years and who were recruited through primary care settings-were randomly assigned to either the motivational intervention (MI) or a self-help (SH) comparison condition was used. Follow-up assessments were conducted at 3 and 6 months. The MI condition consisted of a 30- to 45-minute motivational interviewing session at the participant's home with a trained health educator and 4 follow-up telephone counseling calls. Feedback from baseline household air nicotine assessments and assessment of the participant's carbon monoxide level was provided as part of the intervention. Participants in the SH group received a copy of the smoking cessation manual, the passive smoke reduction tip sheet, and the resource guide in the mail. Household nicotine levels were measured by a passive diffusion monitor.
The 6-month nicotine levels were significantly lower in MI households. Repeated measures analysis of variance across baseline, 3-month, and 6-month time points showed a significant time-by-treatment interaction, whereby nicotine levels for the MI group decreased significantly and nicotine levels for the SH group increased but were not significantly different from baseline.
This study targeted a large sample of racially and ethnically diverse low-income families, in whom both exposure and disease burden is likely to be significant. This is the first study to our knowledge that has been effective in reducing objective measures of passive smoke exposure in households with healthy children. These findings have important implications for pediatric health care providers, who play an important role in working with parents to protect children's health. Providers can help parents work toward reducing household passive smoke exposure using motivational strategies and providing a menu of approaches regardless of whether the parents are ready to quit.
在美国,儿童被动吸烟现象十分普遍;据估计,近40%的5岁以下儿童与吸烟者生活在一起。针对减少儿童被动吸烟的随机研究很少,且已评估的干预措施的影响有限。本研究的目的是确定针对幼儿吸烟父母的动机干预是否会减少家庭中的被动吸烟。
“让婴儿远离烟雾”(KISS)项目是一项理论驱动的减少暴露干预措施,针对有幼儿的低收入家庭,是一项随机对照研究,参与者为吸烟的父母/照顾者(N = 291),他们的孩子年龄小于3岁,通过初级保健机构招募,被随机分配到动机干预(MI)组或自助(SH)对照组。在3个月和6个月时进行随访评估。MI组包括在参与者家中由经过培训的健康教育工作者进行30至45分钟的动机访谈,以及4次后续电话咨询。作为干预的一部分,提供了基线家庭空气中尼古丁评估的反馈以及参与者一氧化碳水平的评估。SH组的参与者通过邮件收到一份戒烟手册、减少被动吸烟小贴士和资源指南。家庭尼古丁水平通过被动扩散监测器测量。
MI组家庭6个月时的尼古丁水平显著较低。对基线、3个月和6个月时间点进行的重复测量方差分析显示,存在显著的时间×治疗交互作用,即MI组的尼古丁水平显著下降,SH组的尼古丁水平上升,但与基线无显著差异。
本研究针对大量种族和民族多样的低收入家庭,在这些家庭中,暴露和疾病负担可能都很严重。据我们所知,这是第一项有效减少健康儿童家庭中被动吸烟客观指标的研究。这些发现对儿科医疗保健提供者具有重要意义,他们在与家长合作保护儿童健康方面发挥着重要作用。提供者可以帮助家长采用动机策略并提供一系列方法来减少家庭中的被动吸烟,无论家长是否准备好戒烟。