Department of Health Promotion, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Department of Communications, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
BMC Public Health. 2020 May 14;20(1):693. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-08863-7.
Many parents continue to smoke around their children despite the widely known risks of children's exposure to tobacco smoke. We sought to learn about parental smoking behavior around children from parents' perspective.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 65 smoking parents or partners of smoking parents of children up to age 7, to learn about home smoking rules, behaviours performed to try to protect children, and smoking-related conflicts, from parents' perspective. Interviews were recorded and transcribed and thematic analysis performed. Recruitment was challenging due to the sensitive nature of the topic.
Many parents described smoking around their children in certain areas of the home, outdoors, and in what they consider to be open or ventilated areas. Participants emphasized efforts to protect their children and described various mitigating practices but held mixed views as to their effectiveness. Parents had different conceptions of which areas or distances were considered 'safe'. Many smoking parents described conflicts both internal and with other family members regarding the protection of children. Some parents who continue to smoke around their children despite understanding the health risks felt powerless to effect change, as well as being uncertain as to the effectiveness of their protective strategies; others were aware but reluctant to change.
Findings shed light on some of the difficulties faced by smoking parents and obstacles to maintaining a smoke-free environment for their children, providing insight for the type of information and support required to help parents better protect their children from exposure to tobacco smoke. Awareness of health risks associated with secondhand smoke was demonstrated, yet parents in smoking families were confused regarding which rules and behaviours best protect children from exposure to tobacco smoke. Parents were sometimes aware that their smoking 'rules' and mitigating practices were limited in their effectiveness. Guidelines should be provided explaining how and when exposure occurs and how to keep children safe.
尽管儿童暴露于烟草烟雾的风险众所周知,但许多父母仍在其周围吸烟。我们试图从父母的角度了解父母在儿童周围的吸烟行为。
对 65 名吸烟父母或吸烟父母的子女(7 岁以下)的伴侣进行半结构化访谈,从父母的角度了解家庭吸烟规则、为保护儿童而采取的行为以及与吸烟有关的冲突。对访谈进行录音和转录,并进行主题分析。由于主题的敏感性,招募工作具有挑战性。
许多父母描述了他们在房屋的某些区域、户外和他们认为开放或通风的区域内吸烟。参与者强调了保护孩子的努力,并描述了各种缓解措施,但对其有效性存在不同看法。父母对哪些区域或距离被认为是“安全”有不同的概念。许多吸烟的父母描述了他们在保护孩子方面与孩子内部以及与其他家庭成员之间的冲突。一些尽管了解健康风险但仍在其周围吸烟的父母感到无力改变,也不确定他们的保护策略是否有效;其他人则是意识到了但不愿意改变。
研究结果揭示了吸烟父母所面临的一些困难以及为其子女维持无烟环境的障碍,为帮助父母更好地保护子女免受烟草烟雾暴露所需的信息和支持类型提供了深入了解。父母表现出对二手烟相关健康风险的认识,但吸烟家庭的父母对哪些规则和行为最能保护儿童免受烟草烟雾暴露感到困惑。父母有时意识到他们的吸烟“规则”和缓解措施在有效性上存在局限性。应提供指南,说明暴露发生的方式和时间以及如何确保儿童安全。