| Literature DB >> 24326101 |
Chris G Richardson1, Laura L Struik, Kenneth C Johnson, Pamela A Ratner, Carolyn Gotay, Jasmina Memetovic, Chizimuzo T Okoli, Joan L Bottorff.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent evidence indicates a causal link between both active smoking and secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure and breast cancer (BC).Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; cancer prevention; gender; secondhand smoke; youth
Year: 2013 PMID: 24326101 PMCID: PMC3868973 DOI: 10.2196/resprot.2858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1Flow diagram for START trial.
Figure 2Girls' intervention message.
Figure 3Boys' intervention message.
Figure 4Aboriginal boys' intervention message (the difference compared to Figure 3 is the feather in the background).
Figure 5Control message.
Participants’ sociodemographics and patterns of tobacco exposure.
| General characteristics | Intervention | Control | Total | ||
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| Male | 310 (47.80) | 348 (41.48) | 658 (44.22) |
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| Female | 339 (52.23) | 491 (58.52) | 830 (55.78) |
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| 13 | 92 (14.18) | 172 (20.50) | 264 (17.74) |
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| 14 | 351 (54.08) | 480 (57.21) | 831 (55.85) |
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| 15 | 206 (31.74) | 187 (22.29) | 393 (26.41) |
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| Aboriginal | 71 (11.34) | 96 (11.81) | 167 (11.61) |
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| Non-Aboriginal | 555 (88.66) | 717 (88.19) | 1272 (88.39) |
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| Below average | 26 (4.24) | 39 (5.01) | 65 (4.67) |
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| Average | 458 (74.71) | 602 (77.38) | 1060 (76.20) |
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| Above average | 129 (21.04) | 137 (17.61) | 266 (19.12) |
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| Family history of breast cancera | Yes | 153 (24.60) | 154 (19.59) | 307 (21.80) |
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| Has tried smoking tobacco | Yes | 60 (9.20) | 104 (12.40) | 164 (11.00) |
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| Had one or a few puffs | 22 (38.60) | 36 (35.29) | 58 (36.48) |
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| 1-5 | 14 (24.56) | 22 (21.57) | 36 (22.64) |
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| 6-15 | 8 (14.04) | 8 (7.84) | 16 (10.06) |
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| 16-25 | 1 (1.75) | 8 (7.84) | 9 (5.66) |
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| 26-99 | 4 (7.02) | 12 (11.76) | 16 (10.06) |
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| >100 | 8 (14.04) | 16 (15.69) | 24 (15.09) |
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| ≤10 years old | 10 (18.18) | 8 (7.92) | 18 (11.54) |
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| 11 years old | 5 (9.09) | 10 (9.90) | 15 (9.62) |
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| 12 years old | 11 (20.00) | 22 (21.78) | 33 (21.15) |
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| 13 years old | 13 (23.64) | 40 (39.60) | 53 (33.97) |
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| >14 years old | 16 (29.09) | 21 (20.79) | 37 (23.72) |
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| Definitely yes | 2 (0.35) | 0 (0.00) | 2 (0.17) |
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| Probably yes | 12 (2.11) | 30 (4.26) | 42 (3.30) |
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| Probably not | 122 (21.40) | 157 (22.30) | 279 (21.90) |
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| Definitely not | 434 (76.14) | 517 (73.44) | 951 (74.65) |
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| Parent(s) smokeb | Yes | 146 (25.39) | 239 (32.61) | 385 (29.41) |
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| Friends smokea | Yes | 83 (17.29) | 144 (23.00) | 227 (20.51) |
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| Someone smokes in home almost every daya | Yes | 60 (9.40) | 107 (13.19) | 167 (11.50) |
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| Every day | 20 (3.15) | 35 (4.29) | 55 (3.79) |
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| Almost every day | 70 (11.04) | 79 (9.68) | 149 (10.28) |
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| At least once a week | 153 (24.13) | 236 (28.92) | 389 (26.83) |
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| At least once in the past month | 281 (44.32) | 347 (42.50) | 628 (43.31) |
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| Never | 110 (17.35) | 119 (14.58) | 229 (15.79) |
| Tobacco knowledge: Tobacco identified as a risk factor for breast cancer | Yes | 172 (26.50) | 208 (24.79) | 380 (25.54) | |
a P<.05 (Fisher’s exact tests).
b P<.01 (Fisher’s exact tests).
c P<.001 (Fisher’s exact tests).
dTotal number of responses varies slightly for each variable.
Postintervention assessment of perceived risk and information seeking.
| Postintervention assessments | Responsee | Intervention, n (%) | Control, n (%) | Unadjusted RR (95% CI) | Unadjusted risk difference, % | Adjusted RRa-d (95% CI) | ||
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| My cigarette smoking increases my risk of getting BC (smoking girls) (n=32) | Agree (n=24) | 8 (66.7) | 16 (80.0) | 0.84 (0.56-1.26) | −13.3 | N/A | |
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| If I start smoking it will increase my risk of getting BC (nonsmoking girls) (n=716) | Agree (n=659) | 306 (98.4) | 353 (87.2) | 1.13h (1.08-1.17) | 11.2 | 1.14h (1.08-1.20) | |
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| Being exposed to secondhand cigarette smoke increases my risk of getting BC (all girls) (n=724) | Agree (n=646) | 301 (95.6) | 345 (84.4) | 1.13h (1.07-1.19) | 11.2 | 1.14h (1.07-1.21) | |
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| Being exposed to my secondhand cigarette smoke increases the BC risk of the girls I spend time with (smoking girls) (n=31) | Agree (n=22) | 9 (75.0) | 13 (68.4) | 1.13 (0.73-1.77) | 6.6 | N/A | |
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| All girls (n=720) | Agree (n=647) | 303 (95.9) | 344 (85.1) | 1.13h (1.07-1.19) | 10.8 | 1.14h (1.07-1.21) |
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| All boys (n=560) | Agree (n=504) | 261 (93.9) | 243 (87.4) | 1.08f (1.02-1.14) | 6.5 | 1.10g (1.02-1.18) |
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| Being exposed to my SHS increases the BC risk of the girls I spend time with (smoking boys) (n=21) | Agree (n=15) | 7 (77.8) | 8 (66.7) | 1.10 (0.66-1.84) | 11.1 | N/A | |
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| All girls (n=830) | Agree (n=158) | 77 (22.7) | 81 (16.5) | 1.37f (1.04-1.82) | 6.2 | 1.52f (1.12-2.06) | |
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| All boys (n=658) | Yes (n=69) | 25 (8.1) | 44 (12.6) | 0.63f (0.401-0.997) | −4.5 | N/A | |
aRelative risk was obtained using a modified Poisson regression (with a robust covariance estimator).
bAll models included potential confounders (age, family history of BC, intention to smoke in the future, and smoking status of parents and peers).
cEthnicity (Aboriginal status) was initially included to test for an interaction with intervention group and then removed because all interactions were not significant.
dThe model had problems with convergence due to low cell counts.
e Strongly agree and Agree were collapsed as “agree” and Strongly disagree and Disagree were collapsed as “disagree,” with disagree as the referent response for the calculation of RR.
f P<.05.
g P<.01.
h P<.001.