| Literature DB >> 29133798 |
Sasha G Hutchinson1, Gerard van Breukelen2, Constant P van Schayck3, Brigitte Essers4, S Katharine Hammond5, Jean W M Muris3, Frans J M Feron6, Edward Dompeling7.
Abstract
We tested the effectiveness of a program consisting of motivational interviewing (MI) and feedback of urine cotinine to stop passive smoking (PS) in children at risk for asthma. Fifty-eight families with children 0-13 years with a high risk of asthma and PS exposure were randomised in a one-year follow-up study. The intervention group received the intervention program during 6 sessions (1/month) and the control group received measurements (questionnaires, urine cotinine, and lung function) only. The primary outcome measure was the percentage of families stopping PS (parental report verified and unverified with the child's urine cotinine concentration <10 μg/l) in children during the intervention program. The analyses were performed with Mixed Logistic Regression. After 6 months, a significant group difference was observed for the unverified parental report of stopping PS in children: 27% of parents in the intervention group versus 7% in the control group. For the verified parental report, the difference was similar (23% versus 7%) but was not statistically significant. Despite a limited sample size, the results suggest that the intervention program is probably an effective strategy to stop PS in children. A program longer than 6 months might be necessary for a longer lasting intervention effect.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29133798 PMCID: PMC5684321 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-15158-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Flow Chart. Flow chart randomised controlled trial.
Baseline characteristics.
| Intervention group (n = 30)a | Control group (n = 28)a | |
|---|---|---|
| Children’s mean age in years (mean, (SD)) | 8.45 (2.69) | 8.76 (2.42) |
|
| ||
| • Male | 17 (57) | 16 (57) |
| • Female | 13 (43) | 12 (42) |
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| • Respiratory infection (past 12 months) | 13 (43) | 15 (54) |
| • Wheezing ever | 9 (30) | 11 (39) |
| • Recent wheeze (past 3 months) | 7 (23) | 8 (29) |
| • Dyspnea ever | 5 (17) | 8 (29) |
| • Use of inhaled drugs | 2 (7) | 5 (18) |
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| • FEV | 94.70 (2.53) | 92.79 (2.15) |
| • FEV | 99.55 (2.57) | 95.38 (1.87) |
| • FVC (% predicted value pre- bronchodilator, (SE)) | 93.25 (2.31) | 90.63 (2.49) |
| • MEF | 77.35 (3.62) | 81.71 (4.04) |
| • FEV1/FVC (% pre-bronchodilator, (SE)) | 86.35 (1.30) | 87.25 (1.48) |
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| • Mother | 21 (70) | 21 (75) |
| • Father | 3 (10) | 5(18) |
|
| 37.17 (6.11) | 42.15 (6.62) |
|
| 3 (10) | 3 (11) |
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| • Smoking mothers | 9 (30) | 9 (32) |
| • Smoking fathers | 7 (23) | 7 (25) |
| • Smoking both parents | 8 (27) | 10 (30) |
|
| 23.79 (16.08) | 24.58 (16.14) |
|
| 12.17 (11.16) | 12.08 (13.83) |
|
| 9.03 (11.71) | 13.12 (20.46) |
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| • Primary caregiver | 4.45 (2.31) | 3.74 (2.62) |
| • Partners | 4.45 (2.70) | 3.82 (2.27) |
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| No intention | 10 (42) | 7 (27) |
| Precontemplation | 4 (17) | 3 (12) |
| Contemplation | 4 (17) | 6 (23) |
| Preparation | 2 (8) | 3 (12) |
| Not applicable (non-smoker) | 4 (17) | 7 (27) |
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| No intention | 7 (29) | 11 (42) |
| Pre- | 1 (4) | 0 (0) |
| contemplation | 3 (13) | 4 (15) |
| Contemplation | 1 (4) | 2 (8) |
| Preparation | 12 (50) | 9 (35) |
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| • Low | 4 (13) | 4 (14) |
| • Middle | 15 (50) | 13 (46) |
| • High | 5 (16) | 9 (32) |
aExcept for the child’s age and gender, baseline characteristics were not available for n = 6 families in the intervention group and n = 2 families in the control group due to dropout (lost- of-follow up) before baseline measurement.
Test of the baseline group difference: p > 0.05 for all variables, indicating absence of severe bias due to dropout.
Passive smoking verified and not-verified by urine cotinine in the intervention and control group in the course of time.
| Time | Passive | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention group (n (%)) | Control group (n (%)) | |||||
| No | Yes | Missing* | No | Yes | Missing* | |
|
| ||||||
| 0 months | 0 (0) | 30 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 28 (100) | 0 (0) |
| 3 months | 3 (10) | 17 (57) | 10 (33) | 0 (0) | 21 (75) | 7 (25) |
| 6 months | 7 (23) | 11 (37) | 12 (40) | 2 (7) | 19 (68) | 7 (25) |
| 9 months | 4 (13) | 13 (43) | 13 (43) | 0 (0) | 23 (82) | 5 (19) |
| 12 months | 5 (17) | 13 (43) | 12 (40) | 2 (7) | 19 (68) | 7 (25) |
|
| ||||||
| 0 months | 0 (0) | 30 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 28 (100) | 0 (0) |
| 3 months | 3 (10) | 17 (57) | 10 (33) | 0 (0) | 21 (75) | 7 (25) |
| 6 months | 8 (27) | 10 (33) | 12 (40) | 2 (7) | 19 (68) | 7 (25) |
| 9 months | 7 (23) | 10 (33) | 13 (43) | 2 (7) | 21 (75) | 5 (19) |
| 12 months | 6 (20) | 12 (40) | 12 (40) | 4 (14) | 17 (61) | 7 (25) |
*‘Missing’ include lost to follow-up as seen in Fig. 1 as well as families who were not lost to follow-up but were not able to participate with one/more of the measurements.
Model estimatesa for group difference between intervention and control group (reference) for urine cotinine verified and not-verified parental report of passive smoking in children.
| Variable | Estimate (β) | Standard Error | p-value (two- tailed) | Odds Ratio intervention/control resp. control/intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Time = 3 months | −3.83 | 3.01* | 0.21* | 0.02 resp. 29.37* |
| Time = 6 months | −1.72 | 0.92 | 0.06 | 0.18 resp. 5.60 |
| Time = 9 months | −7.78 | 14.40* | 0.59* | 0.00 resp. 2,392* |
| Time = 12 months | −1.30 | 0.93 | 0.17 | 0.27 resp. 3.67 |
|
| ||||
| Time = 3 months | −5.06 | 4.65* | 0.28* | 0.01 resp. 156.80* |
| Time = 6 months | −1.88 | 0.87 | 0.03 | 0.15 resp. 6.53 |
| Time = 9 months | −1.96 | 0.93 | 0.04 | 0.14 resp. 7.11 |
| Time = 12 months | −0.57 | 0.74 | 0.44 | 0.56 resp. 1.77 |
Odds ratio of exposure for treated versus control respectively for control versus treated. aGLMM, dependent variable passive smoking (yes (1) or no (0)).
bUnadjusted: analysis without gender and age as covariates.
*Large Standard Error, p-value and Odds Ratio due to zero non-exposed in the control group (see Table 2).
Figure 2Amount of cigarettes smoked in the presence of the child indoors and amount of cigarettes smoked by parents (actively). (A) Median amount of cigarettes smoked in the presence of the child indoors. (B) Predicted mean square root of the amount of the cigarettes smoked in the presence of the child indoors, based upon the Generalized Linear Mixed-effects Models (GLMM) model analysis of all available data after square root transform and without imputing missing values. (C) Median amount of cigarettes smoked by parents (active smoking). (D) Predicted mean square root of the amount of the cigarettes smoked by parents based upon the GLMM analysis of all available data after square root transform and without imputing missing values.