| Literature DB >> 25785496 |
Nicola Brown1, Tim Luckett2, Patricia M Davidson3,4, Michelle Di Giacomo5.
Abstract
Exposure to adult smoking can have deleterious effects on children. Interventions that assist families with smoking cessation/reduction and environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) avoidance can improve child health outcomes and reduce the risk of smoking initiation. The purpose of this review was to describe the state of the science of interventions with families to promote smoke-free home environments for infants and young children, including parent smoking reduction and cessation interventions, ETS reduction, and anti-smoking socialisation interventions, using the socio-ecological framework as a guide. A systematic review of peer-reviewed articles identified from journal databases from 2000 to 2014 was undertaken. Of 921 articles identified, 28 were included in the review. Considerable heterogeneity characterised target populations, intervention types, complexity and intensity, precluding meta-analysis. Few studies used socio-ecological approaches, such as family theories or concepts. Studies in early parenthood (child age newborn to one year) tended to focus on parent smoking cessation, where studies of families with children aged 1-5 years were more likely to target household SHSe reduction. Results suggest that interventions for reduction in ETS may be more successful than for smoking cessation and relapse prevention in families of children aged less than 5 years. There is a need for a range of interventions to support families in creating a smoke free home environment that are both tailored and targeted to specific populations. Interventions that target the social and psychodynamics of the family should be considered further, particularly in reaching vulnerable populations. Consideration is also required for approaches to interventions that may further stigmatise families containing smokers. Further research is required to identify successful elements of interventions and the contexts in which they are most effective.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25785496 PMCID: PMC4377954 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph120303091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Medline search strategy.
Study design and level of quality (AHRQ 2008).
| Reference | Focus | Design | Internal Validity | External Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phillips | Smoking relapse prevention | RCT | Good | Good |
| Hovell | Smoking cessation/SHS reduction | RCT | Good | Good |
| Kuiper | Smoking cessation/SHS reduction | RCT | Fair | Good |
| Chan-Yeung | SHSe reduction | RCT | Fair | Good |
| Conway | SHSe reduction | RCT | Fair | Good |
| Joseph | Smoking cessation | Pilot Quasi-experimental | Fair | Fair |
| Jiminez-Muro | Smoking cessation/relapse prevention | RCT | Fair | Fair |
| Storrø | Smoking reduction | Cohort control trial with one year time difference | Fair | Fair |
| Winickoff | Smoking cessation/reduction | Quasi RCT | Fair | Fair |
| Hannover | Smoking cessation/relapse prevention | Quasi RCT | Fair | Fair |
| Kallio | Smoking cessation/reduction/SHS reduction | RCT (longitudinal) | Fair | Fair |
| Abdullah | Smoking cessation | RCT | Fair | Fair |
| Wiggins | Smoking cessation | RCT | Fair | Fair |
| Baheiraei | SHSe reduction | RCT | Fair | Fair |
| Emmons | SHSe reduction | RCT | Fair | Fair |
| Kitzman | Smoking prevention | RCT (longitudinal) | Fair | Fair |
| Øien | Smoking cessation | Control trial | Fair | Poor |
| Culp | Smoking cessation | Quasi-experimental | Fair | Poor |
| Wilson | SHSe reduction | Pilot RCT | Fair | Poor |
| Huang | SHSe reduction | RCT | Poor | Fair |
| Harutyunyan | SHSe reduction | RCT | Poor | Fair |
| Fossum | SHSe reductions | CT | Poor | Fair |
| Zakarian | SHSe reduction | Quasi-experimental | Fair | Poor |
| Disantis | Smoking cessation/relapse prevention | Pilot 2 arm experimental | Poor | Poor |
| Yücel | SHSe reduction | RCT | Poor | Poor |
Figure 1Search strategy.
Study designs and outcomes.
| Reference | Focus | Participants | Design | Outcomes/Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joseph | To investigate feasibility of screening serum cotinine with lead screening to increase parental smoking cessation and implementation of home smoking restrictions. | 80 smoking parents of children at well child clinics for 12 and 24 month checks. | Pilot Quasi-experimental | |
| Jiminez-Muro | To analyse the efficacy of a motivational interview intervention in postpartum women to prevent relapse in recent quitters and encourage behaviour change in those still smoking. | 412/626 postpartum women smokers. 64% Spanish, 34% immigrants. | RCT | |
| Phillips | To reduce smoking relapse and prolong breastfeeding in mothers during the first 8 weeks postpartum. | 54 mothers of an infant in NICU. Mothers had a history of tobacco use during or within one year of pregnancy, but currently not smoking. | RCT | |
| Disantis | To pilot a postpartum smoking intervention that combined postpartum smoking cessation & relapse prevention with breastfeeding counselling. | 31 low income women who were either current smokers or recent ex-smokers. Hispanic (50%), African-American (25%). Primiparous (45.8%). 62.5% completed high school or higher education. Years of smoking M = 6.96 years (SD = 5.67). Daily cigarettes M = 12.5 (SD = 7.7) 51% quit smoking prior to pregnancy. | Pilot 2 arm experimental | |
| S + B: mothers who quit before or during pregnancy had higher rates of smoking abstinence than those who smoked through pregnancy (x2 = 4.00,
| ||||
| Storrø | To evaluate the impact of a primary prevention intervention program on risk behaviour for allergic disease in primary health care settings (increase cod liver and oily fish intake, reduce parental smoking, reduce indoor dampness). | 2860 pregnant women or women with a child <2 years of age. | Cohort control trial with one year time difference | |
| Winickoff | To test an intervention to address maternal and paternal smoking during postpartum hospitalization. | 101/173 parents. 71% current smokers, 29% recent quitters. 67% female. | Quasi RCT | |
| Hannover | To test the efficacy of an intervention to aid cessation/relapse prevention for postpartum women. | 644 women from 6 hospitals with postpartum units. | Quasi RCT | |
| Hovell | To test the effects of SHS and smoking counselling in high risk families. | 150/244 mothers of children aged less than 4 years exposed to minimum of 3 maternal cigarettes per day. | RCT | |
| Øien | Investigate parental smoking behaviour during pregnancy after introduction of a prenatal, structure, multidisciplinary smoking cessation intervention. | 3839 pregnant women attending primary health care settings. Estimated participation rate of 44% of eligible women in the location (Tondheim). Low smoking prevalence at inclusion (IG: 4.9%, CG: 7.1%). | Control trial | |
| Culp | Evaluate health and safety intervention with first time mothers. | 355 pregnant women in rural south-western states (IG: | Quasi-experimental | |
| Kallio | To determine whether repeated lifestyle counselling alters parental smoking and child exposure to tobacco smoke. | 1062/1105 parents of infants attending a well baby clinic. | RCT (longitudinal) | |
| Abdullah | To evaluate whether telephone counselling based on stages of change could help non-motivated smoking parents of young children to cease. | 952 smoking parents of Chinese children aged 5 years (85.3% fathers). | RCT | |
| Kuiper | To evaluate a multifaceted intervention strategy to reduce occurrence of severe asthma (smoking cessation, SHSE avoidance, dust mite avoidance, breastfeeding, timing of introduction of solid food). | Parents of 476 infants at high risk of severe asthma. | RCT | |
| Wiggins | To evaluate the effect of two forms of postpartum social support (support health visitor (SVH) or community group support (CGS) on maternal and child health outcomes (maternal smoking). | 731 women with infants from culturally diverse and disadvantaged inner city areas of London. Approx 26%–30% smokers across groups. 14% non-English speakers. | RCT | |
| Yücel | To evaluate the effectiveness of an intensive intervention | Parents of 182 children aged 1–5 years. | RCT | |
| Wilson | To investigate feasibility of an intervention (REFRESH) to reduce SHSe for children in their homes. | 59/1693 smoking mothers with at least one child younger than 6 years. Maternal age M = 30 years; child age M = 3.5 years (range 1.2–5.7 years). | Pilot RCT | |
| Huang | To evaluate the effectiveness of a transtheoretical model- based passive smoking prevention program for pregnant women and mothers of young children. | 294/335 women recruited from obstetrics and paediatric departments of four hospitals. IG: 48% pregnant. CG: 45% pregnant. Remainder mothers of children aged <3 years. | RCT | |
| Harutyunyan | To test an intense intervention to reduce child SHSe. | 250 households with children aged 2–6 years recruited via paediatrician primary health care clinics.Maternal age M = 30 years (SD 5.2 years). 53% employed, 36% had a university degree. Household smokers predominately fathers (80%). Child age M = 4 years (SD 1.2 years). Smoking was permitted in all households, some restrictions in approximately half of homes. | RCT | |
| Baheiraei | To assess whether counselling both mother and father reduces infant SHSe. | 130 parents of health infants (<12 months) with at least one parent smoker. Families from predominately lower SES. | RCT | |
| Fossum | To evaluate the effects of a counselling intervention (Smoke Free children). | 41 mothers of newborn infants attending child health clinics. | CT | |
| Zakarian | To evaluate the effectiveness of a behavioural counselling program for reducing child SHSe. | 150 mothers of children aged less than 4 years attending a well-child community clinic. Most mothers were White, not employed, low education. Approximately 40% were single parents. | Quasi-experimental | |
| No significant group x time differences. Number of counselling sessions completed was not a significant covariate. | ||||
| Chan-Yeung | Prevention of asthma in high-risk infants via multifaceted intervention program (house dust mite control, pet avoidance, avoidance of ETS, promotion of breastfeeding). | 545 infants at high risk for asthma and their families. 7% of mothers smoking at baseline (36/493). | RCT | |
| Conway | To evaluate the effectiveness of a lay delivered intervention to reduce ETS exposure in Latino children. | 143 Latino parent-child pairs. Child age 1–9 years (M = 4 years). | RCT | |
| Emmons | Outcome evaluation of project KISS (Keep Infants Safe From Smoke). | 291 smoking low-income parent/caregivers. Children younger than 3 years. | RCT | |
| Kitzman | To test the effect of prenatal and infancy home visits by nurses on 12 year old first born children’s use of substances (cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana). | 1139 low SES African-American women pregnant with first child. | RCT (longitudinal) |
CG: Control group, IG: Intervention group, NRT: Nicotine replacement therapy, PM2.5: Airborne particulate matter < 2.5 μm in size, RR: Response rate, SC: Standard care; SES: Socioeconomic status, SHSe: Second-hand smoke exposure, ETS: Environmental tobacco smoke, UK: United Kingdom, USA: United States of America.
Characteristics of interventions.
| Author | Content | Delivery Personnel | Method of Communication | Intensity/Complexity | Environment | Conceptual Framework | Socio-Ecological Model | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smoking cessation/relapse prevention | |||||||||||||||||||
| Joseph | Serum cotinine feedback, SHSe education, optional counselling, optional NRT | Trained tobacco advisor | Mail and phone | Weekly for 8 weeks | Home | MI, CBT | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Jiminez-Muro | Risks of smoking, health behaviours | Research student | Phone | 5 × 15 minute calls over 3 months | Home (phone) | MI | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Phillips | Newborn cues | Not stated. Partially self-administered | DVD Brochure | Not described | Hospital and home | Attachment theory | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Disantis | Smoking and breastfeeding counselling OR relapse prevention | Counsellor | Face to face Written materials | 15 minutes + written materials | Clinic | Not stated | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Storro | Brief 5As | GP or midwife | Face to face | At least 5 occasions | Clinic | Brief 5As | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Winickoff | Brief 5 As | Trained study staff | Face to face | 15 minutes + offer to enroll in Quitline | Hospital | Brief 5As | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Hannover | Relapse prevention/smoking cessation counselling | Trained study staff | Face to face + phone | Single interview + phone follow up × 2 | Home | MI | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Hovell | SHSe reduction and tailored smoking cessation including option of NRT | Study counsellor | Face to face + phone | 14 sessions over 7 weeks. Mean time/session: 23 minutes | Home | Learning theory | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Oien | Brief office intervention (Fiore | Midwives, GP, nurses | Face to face | Not clear | Primary health care | Not stated | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Culp | Universal program, including smoking and effect of SHSe on infant growth and development | Visitors with child development degree level qualifications | Face to face | Average 10.9 visits before birth + 20.7 visits after birth (approx 1 h per visit) | Home | Not reported | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Kallio | Universal program including smoking | Paediatrician and dietician | Face to face | Paediatrician: every 1–3 months until 2 years Dietician: every 4–6 months until 2 years. Dietician and paediatrician every 6 months until 7 years | Clinic | Not reported | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Abdullah | Smoking cessation and SHSe reduction tailored to stage of change. No NRT information | Nurse | Phone + written materials | Three phone calls × 20–30 min | Home via phone | Transtheoretical model (stages of change) | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Kuiper | Smoking cessation and home bans on smoking | Research nurse | Face to face | Once | Not explained | Not explained | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Wiggens | Social support | Health visitor OR non-professional | Face to face | 1.5–10 h | Home OR community centre | Not explained. ? social support | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Yucel | SHSe information, goal setting, use of resources, urine cotinine feedback | Researcher | Face to face Phone Written materials | Intensive group: Home visits at baseline, 1 & 3 months. Phone calls at 6 & 8 weeks. Minimal intensity group: Home visit at baseline and 3 months. Mail out urine cotinine result | Home | Not stated | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Wilson | 24 h measure on home air quality PM2.5 (particulate matter) & motivational interview | Research staff | Face to face | Four visits over a one month period | Home | MI | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Huang | Impact of passive smoking, avoiding passive smoke in public and at home. Sections tailored to stages of change. | Research staff | Face to face, audiovisual, written materials, phone | Time not stated. Included DVD, booklet, stickers, phone follow up at 2 weeks and 3 weeks post intervention | Home | Transtheoretical model (stages of change) | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Harutyunyan | Importance of healthy environment, dangers of smoking and SHSe, smoking cessation, smoke-free home, PM25 feedback, written materials. CG: written materials only | Research staff | Face to face Written materials Phone | 40 minute MI + 2 follow up phone calls (timeframe not specified) | Home | MI | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Baheiraei | Smoke free children (Fossum | Research student | Face to face Phone Written materials | One face to face interview + two phone interviews (max. 20 min each) | Home | MI | Intrapersonal | ||||||||||||
| Chan-Yeung | Counselled on smoking cessation and instructed to keep house smoke free | Research nurse | Face to face | Single prenatal visit | Home | Risk factors for asthma | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Conway | Problem solving aimed at lowering child ETS in the household | Lay bicultural and bilingual Latina community health advisors. All received 20 h training over 4 weeks | Face to face Phone | Six sessions over four months | Home | Not stated, but problem solving, positive reinforcement & social support described. | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Fossum | Counselling for effects of SHSe, monitoring SHSe, changing smoking habits, supporting non-smoking | Child health nurses | Face to face | Not explained | Child health clinic | Self-efficacy | Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Zakarian | Behavioural counselling including contracting to reduce SHSe, problem solving, goal setting and self-monitoring | Health educators Nurses Medical assistants | Face to face | Seven counselling sessions over 6 months | Clinic (× 3) Home via phone (× 4) | SLT (Bandura 1977) and behavioural ecological model (Hovell, Wahlgreen & Gehrman, 2002 [ref]) | Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Emmons | Choice, personal responsibility for change, sel-efficacy, feedback on CO level. Tailored to interest in quitting smoking or reducing SHSe | Health educator | Face to face Phone | One 30–45 motivational interview + four follow up phone calls | Home | MI | Interpersonal | ||||||||||||
| Kitzman | Nurse Family Partnership. Home visiting program during first two years of child’s life (health promotion, parenting support, developmental screening, planning for pregnancies, education and employment) | Nurse | Face to face | Mean visits during pregnancy = 7 (range 0–118). Mean visits during first two years = 26 visits (range 0–71) | Home | Family partnership model | Intrapersonal Interpersonal | ||||||||||||