Division of Primary Care, University Park, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Population Health Research Institute, St. Georges, University of London, London, UK.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2018 May 3;20(6):665-673. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx163.
Finding effective ways to help pregnant women quit smoking and remain abstinent is a major public health issue. Approximately half of UK women who smoke attempt cessation after conception; unfortunately, up to 75% return to smoking within 12 months postpartum. Interventions for preventing postpartum return to smoking (PPRS) have not been found to be effective. It is important to identify factors associated with PPRS, to inform development of alternative interventions.
Identify by systematic review factors associated with PPRS.
Systematic searches of electronic databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsychINFO, CINAHL), trials registers, and conference proceedings were conducted to November 2016. Studies statistically examining factors associated with PPRS were included. Modified versions of the Newcastle Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale were used to assess studies' quality and a narrative synthesis focused on those judged of high quality.
Thirty-nine studies (12 trials, 27 observational studies) were included. Thirty-one (79.5%) studies were high-quality. Among these, the most common significant predictors of PPRS were being less well educated, younger, multiparous, living with a partner or household member who smoked, experiencing higher stress, depression or anxiety, not breastfeeding, intending to quit only for pregnancy and low confidence to remain abstinent postpartum.
Of the factors found to be associated with PPRS, intending to quit smoking only for the duration of pregnancy, partner/household member smoking and confidence to remain abstinent are those most likely to have a direct, causal impact on smoking behavior after childbirth, and need to be considered when designing interventions to prevent PPRS.
This is the first systematic review of factors that may facilitate or inhibit PPRS. Considering how having a partner or household member who smokes, intending to quit smoking only for pregnancy, having self-efficacy to quit long term, breastfeeding and depression exert direct or indirect impacts on women's relapse to smoking and how such impacts could successfully be manipulated will inform development of new interventions to prevent PPRS.
寻找有效的方法帮助孕妇戒烟并保持戒断状态是一个主要的公共卫生问题。英国大约有一半吸烟的孕妇在怀孕后尝试戒烟;不幸的是,多达 75%的孕妇在产后 12 个月内又开始吸烟。预防产后吸烟复发(PPRS)的干预措施并未被证明有效。重要的是要确定与 PPRS 相关的因素,为开发替代干预措施提供信息。
通过系统综述确定与 PPRS 相关的因素。
系统检索了电子数据库(MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsychINFO、CINAHL)、试验登记处和会议记录,检索时间截至 2016 年 11 月。纳入了统计学上检查与 PPRS 相关因素的研究。使用改良的纽卡斯尔-渥太华质量评估量表评估研究质量,并对被认为质量较高的研究进行了叙述性综合分析。
共纳入 39 项研究(12 项试验,27 项观察性研究)。31 项(79.5%)研究为高质量。其中,PPRS 最常见的显著预测因素是受教育程度较低、年龄较小、多胎、与吸烟的伴侣或家庭成员同住、经历更高的压力、抑郁或焦虑、不进行母乳喂养、仅因怀孕而打算戒烟以及对产后戒断的信心较低。
在所发现的与 PPRS 相关的因素中,仅在怀孕期间戒烟、伴侣/家庭成员吸烟以及保持戒断的信心,最有可能对产后吸烟行为产生直接的、因果的影响,在设计预防 PPRS 的干预措施时需要考虑这些因素。
这是首次对可能促进或抑制 PPRS 的因素进行的系统综述。考虑到伴侣或家庭成员吸烟、仅因怀孕而打算戒烟、长期戒烟的自我效能感、母乳喂养和抑郁如何对妇女的复吸产生直接或间接的影响,以及如何成功地操纵这些影响,将为预防 PPRS 的新干预措施的开发提供信息。