Improving disclosure of smoking by pregnant women1
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Cited by (124)
Reducing Tobacco Smoke Exposure in High-Risk Infants: A Randomized, Controlled Trial
2020, Journal of PediatricsCitation Excerpt :The 11-point scale indicates at baseline parents' plans to keep their infant away from all sources of tobacco smoke exposure (0 = “No thought of or impossible to keep my child away from all smoking”; 10 = “Taking action now to keep my child away from all smoking”). Secondary outcomes included self-reported home and car smoking bans (multiple choice question reported previously)21,40; air-nicotine levels, measured by passive sampling diffusion filters placed in each home at follow-up for both conditions41; maternal report of smoking around the infant using a memory-enhancing Timeline FollowBack procedure42,43; self-reported maternal smoking status confirmed via carbon monoxide (CO) breath sample; mother-reported partner smoking status; father and other household members attendance at counseling sessions; and parent-reported infant healthcare use as measured by clinic and emergency department visits and hospitalization due to respiratory illness. Intention-to-treat analyses used all randomized participants.
Intergenerational pathways linking maternal early life adversity to offspring birthweight
2018, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :In contrast, prenatal smoking rates gathered using computer-assisted telephone interviewing techniques are of higher quality and show less misclassification relative to administrative data (Srisukhumbowornchai et al., 2012). Questions with multiple response options are also preferable, as they can reduce non-disclosure by as much as 40% (Mullen et al., 1991). Next we consider factors that may mediate the association between family-of-origin SES and prenatal smoking.
Understanding motivation to implement smoking bans among mothers with a hospitalized infant
2016, Addictive BehaviorsCitation Excerpt :The baseline interview included demographic, smoking-related, and psychosocial measures. In-home and in-car smoking ban statuses were assessed separately with a multiple-choice question and two confirmation questions (Mullen, Carbonari, et al., 1991, Stotts, Green et al. 2013a,b). Stage of change (SOC) classifications were assigned according to participant responses to four staging questions adapted from the stages of change algorithm for smoking ((DiClemente, Prochaska, et al., 1991); see Fig. 1).
Tobacco use during pregnancy
2022, AddictionThe Development and Testing of a Perinatal Tobacco Attitudes and Behaviors Survey
2022, Journal of Nursing Measurement
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Supported by Michael Wolf, Project Officer, the American Heart Association, Texas Affiliate (grant #88G-258). Dr. Tabak was supported by Postdoctoral Training Grant (T32-HL07555, Dr. Lawrence W. Green, Principal Investigator).