| Literature DB >> 24009742 |
Neil E Klepeis1, Suzanne C Hughes, Rufus D Edwards, Tracy Allen, Michael Johnson, Zohir Chowdhury, Kirk R Smith, Marie Boman-Davis, John Bellettiere, Melbourne F Hovell.
Abstract
Interventions are needed to protect the health of children who live with smokers. We pilot-tested a real-time intervention for promoting behavior change in homes that reduces second hand tobacco smoke (SHS) levels. The intervention uses a monitor and feedback system to provide immediate auditory and visual signals triggered at defined thresholds of fine particle concentration. Dynamic graphs of real-time particle levels are also shown on a computer screen. We experimentally evaluated the system, field-tested it in homes with smokers, and conducted focus groups to obtain general opinions. Laboratory tests of the monitor demonstrated SHS sensitivity, stability, precision equivalent to at least 1 µg/m(3), and low noise. A linear relationship (R(2) = 0.98) was observed between the monitor and average SHS mass concentrations up to 150 µg/m(3). Focus groups and interviews with intervention participants showed in-home use to be acceptable and feasible. The intervention was evaluated in 3 homes with combined baseline and intervention periods lasting 9 to 15 full days. Two families modified their behavior by opening windows or doors, smoking outdoors, or smoking less. We observed evidence of lower SHS levels in these homes. The remaining household voiced reluctance to changing their smoking activity and did not exhibit lower SHS levels in main smoking areas or clear behavior change; however, family members expressed receptivity to smoking outdoors. This study established the feasibility of the real-time intervention, laying the groundwork for controlled trials with larger sample sizes. Visual and auditory cues may prompt family members to take immediate action to reduce SHS levels. Dynamic graphs of SHS levels may help families make decisions about specific mitigation approaches.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24009742 PMCID: PMC3751871 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The airborne particle monitor and feedback system with graphical display.
A. A Dylos particle counter was augmented with a wireless transceiver, visual and audible signals, and additional data storage. B. Real-time data on particle levels were transmitted from the customized Dylos to a local netbook computer running the Ubuntu Linux or Windows XP operating system, where they were displayed on an animated graph and automatically uploaded via USB cell modem to a remote web-server (in figure, see cell phone placed on netbook keyboard to show scale).
The Post-Intervention Questionnaire.
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| 1. | Did you hear or see the alarms sound on any days? (never/none) |
| 2. | On which days and general times of day did they sound? |
| 3. | Were you able to hear or see the alarms easily? |
| 4. | Is there anything about the alarms that you think should be changed? |
| 5. | What are your general opinions about the monitors and alarms? |
| 6. | What did you do when the alarms sounded? For example, did you stop smoking, or open windows or doors? (prompt several times to get complete answers) |
| 7. | Did you make a lasting change in your behavior in response to the alarms? |
| 8. | How much do you think the alarms helped to change your behavior versus just knowledge of the data we showed you last time? |
| 9. | Look at the peaks on the chart that correspond to times of smoking, cooking, or other activities you reported on your time diary? Look how peak levels change based on different circumstances in the house. What do you think about the levels shown? |
| 10. | Looking at the chart data, and thinking about how the alarms sounded in different rooms, what would you consider doing further to reduce smoke levels? |
| 11. | Do you think the alarm feedback would cause you to make lasting changes in your smoking or other behavior? |
Figure 2Response of Dylos particle counter versus mass-adjusted DustTrak monitor.
A. Time series plots of 1-minute readings from six Dylos units used in the present study (points) versus a mass-adjusted DustTrak for a series of 6 cigarette experiments (smooth line). B. Linear regressions showing relationship between average Dylos particle counts above 0.5 microns and DustTrak mass concentrations in μg/m3 for the six units. Counts above 2.5 microns were negligible.
Focus Group Discussion Points and Representative Sentiments.
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| How do you feel about using monitors to keep homes smoke free? |
| It can change the way you live… |
| You think twice before you light a cigarette. |
| Good knowing your air quality, especially when you have children. |
| I’m pretty excited about it. |
| How long could we place the monitors in homes as part of research? |
| I think a 6 month period. |
| I think 6 months to a year. |
| As long as it would take. |
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| What do you think about lights and sound? |
| We all know green is good, yellow is warning and red is danger. |
| . not like a smoke detector that’s loud, obnoxious and continuous. You don’t want the same type of alarm as a smoke detector, because you wouldn’t want families to say “that’s the air monitor”. |
| If something bad was in the air, it could be louder, maybe at a moderate pace? |
| What do you think about showing the particle levels on a laptop screen? |
| It’s very good to see what the levels of contamination are in the house and the difference we can make. Or you have a message on the computer of the levels and perhaps a tip. It would also be good knowing which room the pollutants are in or what is happening in the whole house. |
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| What positive or negative reactions do you think other people might have to the feedback? |
| Lots of people like me don’t want to smoke. I want to quit very badly. Sometimes you just need that extra push in front of your face. |
| It’s an opportunity to educate people. I don’t think my friends that are smokers would react negatively. If there is something beeping, I’m going to explain. It’s a way of opening up a dialog. |
| The fact that you have something concrete to show you’re improving is a motivator. |
| I’d have a hard time sitting there smoking when I realize how much I’m polluting. |
| If I enter a home that had the monitor and they were non-smokers and they say ‘okay, because you smoked in the house this is what happened’, I would make changes obviously. |
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| Who might want to use the monitoring system? |
| … people who want to quit smoking… |
| … this is great when you have children or even before. |
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| … the smoker is so hard core they’re just not going to change. |
| … they’re criticized enough as a smoker… being a smoker is like being a junkie right now. There is very negative connection so approaching them about it could be difficult |
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| Participants suggested that we recruit families that have children with allergies and that we recruit from health clinics, employee lounges, grocery stores and schools. |
Figure 3Room layouts for the homes of the three intervention participants (F1, F2, F3).
Approximate reported smoking locations are designated with a red cigarette icon. Filled rectangles designate the location of the air monitors.
Smoking-Episode Metrics for Kitchen-Dining-Living Room (Kit-Din-Liv) and Bedroom Areas for Baseline (B) and Intervention (I) Periods for Participating Intervention Families (F1, F2, F3) .
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| Monitored Areab |
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| Baseline or Intervention |
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| Time Period, | 6 | 3 | 6 | 3 | 4 | 11 | 4 | 11 | 6 | 5 | 6 | 5 |
| No. Episodes, | 25 | 2 | 53 | 15 | 18 | 86 | 10 | 34 | 102 | 81 | 72 | 90 |
| No. Episodes | 4.5 | 1 | 9 | 6 | 6 | 7 | 3 | 2 | 18 | 16 | 12 | 15 |
| Episode Duration | 213 | 3 | 379 | 154 | 98 | 72 | 57 | 46 | 571 | 495 | 481 | 481 |
| Episode 1-min Peak Level (μg/m3), | 74 | 75 | 96 | 88 | 111 | 102 | 68 | 74 | 114 | 125 | 108 | 78 |
| Episode Average Level (μg/m3), | 69 | 69 | 82 | 72 | 87 | 79 | 65 | 67 | 90 | 93 | 86 | 71 |
| Episode Integrated Level | 19K | 188 | 51K | 13K | 8.2K | 6.6K | 3.8K | 4.2K | 80K | 80K | 61K | 55K |
aEpisodes are defined by continuous periods with particle levels exceeding the first signal threshold of 60 µg/m3 on full days of monitoring
bAreas (i.e., rooms) closest to regular smoking activity are indicated with an asterisk (*)
cWe omitted transition days (i.e., days when signals were activated) in all statistics.
Figure 4Week-long time series of 1-minute particle readings in the homes of the three intervention participants (F1, F2, F3).
Data are shown for 7 days of monitoring near the primary smoking area (black line; Kitchen-Dining-Living area for families F2 and F3; Bedroom for F1) and a secondary area (thinner blue line; Bedroom for F2 and F3; Kitchen-Dining-Living for F1), starting with 3 days during the baseline period (before the signals were activated) and ending after 3 days of the intervention (after signals were activated). The middle day on each plot is the “transition day” on which the signals were activated and the intervention was initiated. The precise transition time is indicated by a vertical red solid line. Family F2 had missing data (due to monitor losing power) in the Kitchen-Dining-Living area for a large portion of the transition day, although both rooms track well for most periods, so the missing data can be inferred from the Bedroom results. The horizontal red dotted line designates the 60 µg/m3 first feedback-signal threshold (left scale). Black horizontal dashed lines designate the mean daily concentration of levels exceeding 60 µg/m3 in Bedroom for F1 and F2 and Kitchen-Dining-Living for F3 (left scale). Thick horizontal lines show the daily integrated (area-under-the-curve) values on the right scale in units of [µg/m3]-min for episodes when these same room levels exceeded 60 µg/m3.
Summary of the Average Number of Daily Time-Activity Events in Baseline (B) and Intervention (I) Periods for Participating Intervention Families (F1, F2, F3).
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| Cigarettes Smokedb | 4.7 | 6.2 | 6.0 | 4.7 | 31 | 45 |
| Cooking Eventsc | 1.0 | - | 2.0 | 1.9 | 1.0 | 0.6 |
| Exterior Window- or Door-Opening Eventsc | 4.8 | 4.3 | - | 2.3 | 13 | 15 |
| HVAC Eventsc | 2.0 | - | 4 | 3.7 | - | 1.0 |
| Marijuana-Smoking Eventsc | - | - | - | - | 4.5 | 7.6 |
| No. of Signalsc,d | - | 6.2 | - | 3.8 | - | 12.6 |
aThe data in this table were obtained from participant self-reports. Participants filled out paper time-diary forms on a daily basis. Cells for which there were no reported data contain a hyphen "- " symbol.
bThis row contains the average number of cigarettes smoked in the home per day, allowing for multiple cigarettes smoked per hour.
cThese rows in the table contain the average number of hours per day that non-cigarette events were reported to occur. Multiple events within each hour were not considered for non-cigarette events, i.e., these data do not reflect more than one individual event that may have occurred within a given hour.
dThe number of audible and/or visual signals that were perceived by participants were reported for the intervention (I) period.
Figure 5Day-long 1-minute particle levels in home F2 for selected days during baseline and intervention.
The black line designates the Kitchen-Dining-Living area monitor readings (monitor placed in Dining Room) and the thin blue line designates the Bedroom monitor readings (child’s room).