University of Rochester School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics (KM Wilson), Rochester, NY; Julius B. Richmond Center of Excellence, American Academy of Pediatrics (KM Wilson, JD Klein, and JP Winickoff), Itasca, Ill; Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus (KM Wilson, A Moss, and GS Kerby), Aurora, Colo; Children's Hospital Colorado (KM Wilson, A Moss, M Lowary, J Holstein, J Gambino, and GS Kerby), Aurora, Colo.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus (KM Wilson, A Moss, and GS Kerby), Aurora, Colo; Children's Hospital Colorado (KM Wilson, A Moss, M Lowary, J Holstein, J Gambino, and GS Kerby), Aurora, Colo.
Acad Pediatr. 2022 Aug;22(6):997-1005. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2021.11.010. Epub 2021 Nov 21.
Hospitalized children have high rates of tobacco smoke exposure; parents who smoke may be receptive to interventions during their child's hospitalization.
We tested the efficacy of a smoking cessation intervention for parents of hospitalized children.
We conducted a randomized, single-blind clinical trial from 12/14-5/18 at the Children's Hospital Colorado. Hospitalized children who had a parent who smoked tobacco were eligible.
Intervention participants received motivational interviewing sessions, 2 weeks of nicotine replacement therapy; both groups received referral to the Quitline Consenting parents completed a questionnaire; urine was collected from the child for measurement of cotinine. Our primary outcome was: 1) increase in reporting "no one is allowed to smoke anywhere" in the home (smoke-free home rule). Additional outcomes included: 2) change in child's cotinine from baseline to 1 year, and 3) parental quitting at 1 year. Data were analyzed using Chi-square and t tests for bivariable data, and multivariable logistic and linear regression.
Of 1641 eligible families approached, 252 were randomized (15%); 149 families had follow-up data at 12 months (59%). In the adjusted analysis, there was no difference between the groups in smoke free home rules, or child cotinine level; in an intention-to-treat analysis, 15% in the intervention group versus 8% of controls reported quit (p=0.07).
A smoking cessation intervention can be delivered to parents of hospitalized children. While hospitalization provides an opportunity to help parents quit smoking, more efficient and effective engagement strategies are needed to optimize tobacco control success.
住院儿童暴露于烟草烟雾的比率较高;吸烟的父母可能会在孩子住院期间接受干预。
我们测试了针对住院儿童父母的戒烟干预措施的效果。
我们于 2014 年 12 月 14 日至 2018 年 5 月 18 日在科罗拉多儿童医院进行了一项随机、单盲临床试验。符合条件的住院儿童的父母中有吸烟者。
干预组参与者接受了动机访谈,2 周尼古丁替代疗法;两组均接受戒烟热线转介,同意的父母完成了一份问卷;从孩子身上采集尿液,用于测量可替宁。我们的主要结果是:1)家中“任何人都不得在任何地方吸烟”的报告增加(无烟家庭规则)。其他结果包括:2)孩子可替宁从基线到 1 年的变化,以及 3)父母在 1 年内戒烟。使用卡方检验和 t 检验对双变量数据进行数据分析,并进行多变量逻辑回归和线性回归。
在 1641 个符合条件的家庭中,有 252 个家庭被随机分组(15%);149 个家庭在 12 个月时有随访数据(59%)。在调整分析中,两组之间的无烟家庭规则或儿童可替宁水平没有差异;在意向治疗分析中,干预组 15%的人报告戒烟,而对照组为 8%(p=0.07)。
可以向住院儿童的父母提供戒烟干预措施。虽然住院提供了帮助父母戒烟的机会,但需要更有效和有效的参与策略来优化烟草控制的成功。