Reducing children's exposure to environmental tobacco smoke: the empirical evidence and directions for future research
Melbourne F Hovell, Joy M Zakarian, Dennis R Wahlgren, Georg E Matt
Center for
Behavioral Epidemiology and Community Health, Graduate School of Public
Health, San Diego State University, San Diego, California, USA
Correspondence to: Mel Hovell, PhD, MPH, C-BEACH, 9245 Sky Park Court, Suite 230, San Diego, CA 92123, USA; behepi{at}rohan.sdsu.edu
OBJECTIVE
To summarise
the issues and empirical evidence for reduction of children's
residential environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure.
DATA
SOURCES
Literature was obtained by computer
search, with emphasis on studies that included quantitative measures of
ETS exposure in children's residences and interventions based on
social learning theory.
STUDY SELECTION
Review
and empirical articles concerning ETS exposure were included and
inferences were drawn based on a synthesis of these studies as
contrasted with a quantitative meta-analysis.
DATA
SYNTHESIS
Interventions designed for
residential/child ETS exposure control have included policy/legal
regulations, minimal clinical services, and counselling services.
Divorce court and adoption services have limited custody to protect
children from ETS exposure. Controlled trials of clinicians' one time
counselling services have shown null results. One controlled trial
found that repeated physician ETS counselling increased parent
cessation. Three trials found that repeated counselling/shaping
procedures reduced quantitative estimates of ETS exposure in asthmatic children.
CONCLUSIONS
Insufficient
controlled studies of repeated session counselling procedures have been
completed to determine efficacy for ETS exposure reduction, but
evidence is promising. One time minimal interventions appear
ineffective, but large scale studies may be warranted. No studies have
been conducted to assess court or adoption agency regulations; no
community ordinances for regulating residential ETS exposure have been
invoked. Ethical and enforcement issues are discussed.
Keywords: environmental tobacco smoke; passive smoking; interventions; counselling
© 2000 by Tobacco Control
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