Literature DB >> 12696657

Children's exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in the home: comparison of urine cotinine and parental reports.

Glenn C Wong1, Barbara A Berman, Tuyen Hoang, Coen Bernaards, Craig Jones, J Thomas Bernert.   

Abstract

The authors examined the relationship between parent-reported estimates of children's exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) in the home and children's urinary cotinine levels. Data were collected from a largely ethnic minority, low-income, urban sample of households in which a child had asthma and at least 1 household member smoked. Information about level of household smoking restriction, parental smoking status, and number of cigarettes smoked per day accounted for approximately 45% of the variance in cotinine concentration. Detailed information about the duration of household smoking or children's ETS exposure added no additional significant information. Questionnaires eliciting detailed information about smoking habits and children's ETS exposure may be no better at predicting children's urinary cotinine levels than simpler surveys that inquire about smoking restrictions in the home, parental smoking status, and number of cigarettes smoked at home per day.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12696657     DOI: 10.1080/00039890209602092

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Environ Health        ISSN: 0003-9896


  8 in total

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Authors:  Leanne Streja; Catherine M Crespi; Roshan Bastani; Glenn C Wong; Craig A Jones; John T Bernert; Donald Tashkin; S Katharine Hammond; Barbara A Berman
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Review 5.  Assessing secondhand smoke exposure with reported measures.

Authors:  Erika Avila-Tang; Jessica L Elf; K Michael Cummings; Geoffrey T Fong; Melbourne F Hovell; Jonathan D Klein; Robert McMillen; Jonathan P Winickoff; Jonathan M Samet
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6.  A longitudinal study of environmental tobacco smoke exposure in children: parental self reports versus age dependent biomarkers.

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7.  Prenatal Versus Postnatal Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Intensive Care Use in Children Hospitalized With Bronchiolitis.

Authors:  Michelle D Stevenson; Jonathan M Mansbach; Eugene Mowad; Michelle Dunn; Sunday Clark; Pedro A Piedra; Ashley F Sullivan; Carlos A Camargo
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8.  Assessing secondhand and thirdhand tobacco smoke exposure in Canadian infants using questionnaires, biomarkers, and machine learning.

Authors:  Jaclyn Parks; Kathleen E McLean; Lawrence McCandless; Russell J de Souza; Jeffrey R Brook; James Scott; Stuart E Turvey; Piush J Mandhane; Allan B Becker; Meghan B Azad; Theo J Moraes; Diana L Lefebvre; Malcolm R Sears; Padmaja Subbarao; Tim K Takaro
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2021-06-26       Impact factor: 5.563

  8 in total

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