Orton Sophie, Jones Laura L, Cooper Sue, Lewis Sarah, Coleman Tim
UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies & Division of Primary Care, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
UK Centre for Tobacco & Alcohol Studies and Unit of Public Health, Epidemiology & Biostatistics, School of Health & Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Nov 14;9(11):e112690. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112690. eCollection 2014.
Children's exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) has been causally linked to a number of childhood morbidities and mortalities. Over 50% of UK children whose parents are smokers are regularly exposed to SHS at home. No previous review has identified the factors associated with children's SHS exposure in the home.
To identify by systematic review, the factors which are associated with children's SHS exposure in the home, determined by parent or child reports and/or biochemically validated measures including cotinine, carbon monoxide or home air particulate matter.
Electronic searches of MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsychINFO, CINAHL and Web of Knowledge to July 2014, and hand searches of reference lists from publications included in the review were conducted.
Forty one studies were included in the review. Parental smoking, low socioeconomic status and being less educated were all frequently and consistently found to be independently associated with children's SHS exposure in the home. Children whose parents held more negative attitudes towards SHS were less likely to be exposed. Associations were strongest for parental cigarette smoking status; compared to children of non-smokers, those whose mothers or both parents smoked were between two and 13 times more likely to be exposed to SHS.
Multiple factors are associated with child SHS exposure in the home; the best way to reduce child SHS exposure in the home is for smoking parents to quit. If parents are unable or unwilling to stop smoking, they should instigate smoke-free homes. Interventions targeted towards the socially disadvantaged parents aiming to change attitudes to smoking in the presence of children and providing practical support to help parents smoke outside the home may be beneficial.
儿童接触二手烟(SHS)与多种儿童疾病和死亡存在因果关系。在英国,父母吸烟的儿童中,超过50%经常在家中接触二手烟。此前尚无综述确定与儿童在家中接触二手烟相关的因素。
通过系统综述确定与儿童在家中接触二手烟相关的因素,这些因素由父母或儿童报告和/或通过生物化学验证的指标(包括可替宁、一氧化碳或家庭空气中的颗粒物)来确定。
对截至2014年7月的MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsychINFO、CINAHL和Web of Knowledge进行电子检索,并对综述中纳入出版物的参考文献列表进行手工检索。
该综述纳入了41项研究。经常且一致地发现,父母吸烟、社会经济地位低和受教育程度低均与儿童在家中接触二手烟独立相关。父母对二手烟持更消极态度的儿童接触二手烟的可能性较小。父母吸烟状况的关联性最强;与不吸烟父母的孩子相比,母亲或父母双方吸烟的孩子接触二手烟的可能性高出2至13倍。
多种因素与儿童在家中接触二手烟有关;减少儿童在家中接触二手烟的最佳方法是吸烟的父母戒烟。如果父母无法或不愿意戒烟,他们应该营造无烟家庭。针对社会处境不利的父母开展干预措施,旨在改变他们在孩子面前对吸烟的态度,并提供实际支持以帮助父母在户外吸烟,可能会有所帮助。