Tower Craig, Butz Arlene, Lewis-Land Cassia, Zhu Meng, Jassal Mandeep S
a Department of Environmental Health and Engineering , Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore , MD , USA.
b Department of Pediatrics , Johns Hopkins School of Medicine , Baltimore , MD , USA.
J Asthma. 2019 Jul;56(7):693-703. doi: 10.1080/02770903.2018.1490960. Epub 2018 Aug 10.
The socio-structural barriers for reducing secondhand smoke exposure (SHSe) among children with asthma may be insurmountable for low-income caregivers. Health promoting financial incentives (HPFIs) are increasingly being used in the adult population to motivate and sustain tobacco-reduction behaviors. We assessed barriers to SHSe reduction and means to overcome them through the design of an HPFI-based, caregiver-targeted SHSe reduction study.
Using a mixed-methods design, we conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews among low-income primary caregivers of children with asthma residing in Baltimore City. Quantitative data using an online survey were used to augment interview findings.
Home smoking restrictions were a frequently referenced strategy for decreasing SHSe, but interviewees (n = 22) described the complex social pressures that undermine reduction efforts. Caregivers redirected conversations from broadly implemented smoking bans towards targeted reduction strategies among mothers and members of their social network who are active smokers. Participants converged on the notion that sustainable SHSe reduction strategies are realizable only for mothers who are active smokers, possess high self-efficacy and social structures that promote cessation. Survey data (n = 56) clarified the multiple contexts that underlie pediatric SHSe and preferred HPFI architecture that included fixed, recurrent payments contingent on reduced nicotine biomarkers and completion of basic asthma education classes.
Based on the combined analyses, we envision testing a HPFI-based study design whose optimal target population included low-income caregivers and members of their social network where incentives are tied to pediatric biomarkers and asthma education-an integrated approach that has not yet been used in pediatric tobacco studies.
对于低收入的照顾者而言,减少哮喘儿童二手烟暴露(SHSe)的社会结构障碍可能难以克服。促进健康的经济激励措施(HPFIs)越来越多地应用于成年人群体,以激励和维持减少烟草使用的行为。我们通过设计一项以照顾者为目标、基于HPFI的减少SHSe研究,评估了减少SHSe的障碍以及克服这些障碍的方法。
采用混合方法设计,我们对居住在巴尔的摩市的哮喘儿童低收入主要照顾者进行了半结构化深入访谈。使用在线调查获得的定量数据用于补充访谈结果。
家庭吸烟限制是减少SHSe时经常提到的策略,但受访者(n = 22)描述了破坏减少努力的复杂社会压力。照顾者将谈话从广泛实施的吸烟禁令转向针对母亲及其社交网络中积极吸烟成员的有针对性的减少策略。参与者一致认为,只有对于积极吸烟、具有高自我效能感且拥有促进戒烟的社会结构的母亲,可持续的减少SHSe策略才是可行的。调查数据(n = 56)阐明了小儿SHSe背后的多种情况以及首选的HPFI架构,其中包括根据尼古丁生物标志物降低情况和完成基本哮喘教育课程而定的固定、定期付款。
基于综合分析,我们设想测试一种基于HPFI的研究设计,其最佳目标人群包括低收入照顾者及其社交网络成员,激励措施与小儿生物标志物和哮喘教育挂钩——这是一种尚未在小儿烟草研究中使用的综合方法。