Shavers Vickie L, Fagan Pebbles, Alexander Linda A Jouridine, Clayton Richard, Doucet Jennifer, Baezconde-Garbanati Lourdes
National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer Control and Population Science, Applied Research Program, Health Service and Economics Branch, 6130 Executive Blvd, MSC-7344, EPN Room 4005, Bethesda, MD 20892-7344, USA.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2006 Sep;60 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):34-43. doi: 10.1136/jech.2006.046979.
Recognition of the health consequences of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke has led government agencies and many employers to establish policies that restrict cigarette smoking in public and workplaces. This cross sectional study examines the association of workplace smoking policies and home smoking restrictions with current smoking among women.
Participants were employed US women ages 18-64 who were self respondents to the 1998-1999 or 2000-2001 tobacco use supplement to the current population survey supplements. Cross tabulations and multivariate logistic regression analyses examine the association of selected demographic characteristics, occupation, income, workplace and home smoking policies/restrictions with current smoking, consumption patterns, and quit attempts among women by poverty level for five race/ethnic groups.
The prevalence of either having an official workplace or home smoking policy that completely banned smoking increased with increased distance from the poverty level threshold. A complete ban on home smoking was more frequently reported by African American and Hispanic women although Hispanic women less frequently reported an official workplace smoking policy. In general, policies that permitted smoking in the work area or at home were associated with a higher prevalence of current smoking but this varied by poverty level and race/ethnicity. Home smoking policies that permitted smoking were associated with lower adjusted odds of having a least one quit attempt for nearly all poverty level categories but there was no association between having one quit attempt and workplace policies.
Home smoking policies were more consistently associated with a lower prevalence of current smoking irrespective of poverty status or race/ethnicity than workplace policies. These findings underscore the importance of examining tobacco control policies in multiple domains (work and home) as well as by race/ethnicity and socioeconomic position.
认识到接触环境烟草烟雾对健康的影响后,政府机构和许多雇主制定了在公共场合和工作场所限制吸烟的政策。这项横断面研究调查了工作场所吸烟政策和家庭吸烟限制与女性当前吸烟情况之间的关联。
研究参与者为18至64岁受雇的美国女性,她们是1998 - 1999年或2000 - 2001年当前人口调查补充调查中烟草使用补充部分的自填问卷者。交叉表分析和多变量逻辑回归分析,按贫困水平,对五个种族/族裔群体的女性,研究选定的人口统计学特征、职业、收入、工作场所和家庭吸烟政策/限制与当前吸烟情况、消费模式及戒烟尝试之间的关联。
完全禁止吸烟的官方工作场所或家庭吸烟政策的普及率,随着与贫困水平阈值距离的增加而上升。非裔美国女性和西班牙裔女性更常报告家庭完全禁烟,尽管西班牙裔女性较少报告有官方工作场所吸烟政策。总体而言,允许在工作区域或家中吸烟的政策与当前吸烟的较高普及率相关,但这因贫困水平和种族/族裔而异。允许吸烟的家庭吸烟政策,在几乎所有贫困水平类别中,与至少有一次戒烟尝试的调整后较低几率相关,但有一次戒烟尝试与工作场所政策之间没有关联。
无论贫困状况或种族/族裔如何,家庭吸烟政策比工作场所政策更一致地与当前吸烟的较低普及率相关。这些发现强调了在多个领域(工作和家庭)以及按种族/族裔和社会经济地位审查烟草控制政策的重要性。