| Literature DB >> 29258185 |
Gillian S Gould1, Yael Bar Zeev2, Laura Tywman3, Christopher Oldmeadow4, Simon Chiu5, Marilyn Clarke6, Billie Bonevski7.
Abstract
Clinicians often ask pregnant women about tobacco smoking, but their practices of asking about other smoking and nicotine exposures are unknown. This study analysed how often clinicians ask pregnant women about their use of e-cigarettes, cannabis, chewing tobacco, and second-hand smoke (SHS) exposure. Two cross-sectional surveys were undertaken. A random sample of 500 General Practitioner (GP) members were invited from the National Faculty of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health (NFATSIH) to complete an on-line survey, and 5571 GP and Obstetrician (OBS) members of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG) were sent a paper survey by mail. Questions on frequency of asking about the exposures used Likert Scales, later dichotomized to "often-always" and "never-sometimes". Logistic regressions estimated associations between clinician type and asking about cannabis, e-cigarettes, chewing tobacco, and SHS. An adjusted model reduced potential confounders of location, guidelines, gender and population. n = 378 GPs and OBS participated (6.2% response). In total, 13-14% asked "often-always" about e-cigarettes; 58% cannabis; 38% cannabis with tobacco; 27% SHS, and 10% chewing tobacco-compared to 95% of the sample asking about cigarette smoking. After adjustment, the odds of RANZCOG GPs (OR 0.34) and OBS (OR 0.63) asking about cannabis were lower compared to NFATSIH GPs. Clinician type was non-significant for asking about e-cigarettes, chewing tobacco and SHS. Surveyed Australian GPs and obstetricians asked less frequently about e-cigarettes, chewing, SHS exposure, and cannabis, potentially missing important exposures for mother and child.Entities:
Keywords: cannabis; electronic cigarettes; pregnancy; smokeless tobacco; smoking; tobacco
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29258185 PMCID: PMC5751003 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph14121585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Demographic characteristics of 378 Australian GP and Obstetrician respondents of a cross-sectional national survey.
| Variable | Online Survey | Paper Survey | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NFATSIH GP | RANZCOG GP | RANZCOG OBS | ||
| Male | 16 (38.1) | 56 (35.7) | 70 (39.3) | 142 (37.7) |
| Female | 26 (61.9) | 101 (64.3) | 108 (60.7) | 235 (62.3) |
| Current smoker | 0 (0) | 1 (0.6) | 6 (3.4) | 7 (1.9) |
| Ex-smoker | 5 (11.9) | 21 (13.4) | 31 (17.4) | 57 (15.1) |
| Never smoked | 37 (88.1) | 135 (86) | 141 (79.2) | 313 (83) |
| <10 | 13 (31) | 21 (13.4) | 40 (22.5) | 74 (19.6) |
| 10–19 | 11 (26.2) | 39 (24.8) | 43 (24.2) | 93 (24.7) |
| 20 plus | 18 (42.9) | 97 (61.8) | 95 (53.4) | 210 (55.7) |
| Urban RA1 | 17 (40.5) | 78 (51) | 139 (79) | 234 (63.1) |
| Regional RA2 + 3 | 20 (47.6) | 64 (41.8) | 33 (18.8) | 117 (31.5) |
| Remote RA 4 + 5 | 5 (11.9) | 11 (7.2) | 4 (2.3) | 20 (5.4) |
| General Population | 27 (71.1) | 142 (90.4) | 175 (98.3) | 344 (92.2) |
| >30% Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander | 11 (28.9) | 15 (9.6) | 3 (1.7) | 29 (7.8) |
Legend: RANZCOG Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists; NFATSIH National Faculty of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health of Royal Australian College of General Practitioners; GPs General Practitioners; OBS Obstetricians; ASGC-RA Australian Standard Geographical Classification-Remoteness Area.
Proportions of GPs and Obstetricians who ask about exposures to tobacco, cannabis, chewing tobacco, e-cigarettes, and Second-Hand Smoke.
| Variable | NFATSIH GP | RANZCOG GP | RANZCOG OBS | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| often-always | 40 (97.6%) | 151 (96.8%) | 164 (93.2%) | 355 (95.2%) |
| never-sometimes | 1 (2.4%) | 5 (3.2%) | 12 (6.8%) | 18 (4.8%) |
| often-always | 30 (76.9%) | 78 (52.7%) | 98 (57.3%) | 206 (57.5%) |
| never-sometimes | 9 (23.1%) | 70 (47.3%) | 73 (42.7%) | 152 (42.5%) |
| often-always | 23 (59%) | 55 (37.7%) | 56 (32.9%) | 134 (37.7%) |
| never-sometimes | 16 (41%) | 91 (62.3%) | 114 (67.1%) | 221 (62.3%) |
| often-always | 6 (15.4%) | 13 (8.9%) | 16 (9.4%) | 35 (9.9%) |
| never-sometimes | 33 (84.6%) | 133 (91.1%) | 154 (90.6%) | 320 (90.1%) |
| often-always | 8 (20.5%) | 22 (15.0%) | 20 (11.8%) | 50 (14.1%) |
| never-sometimes | 31 (79.5%) | 125 (85.0%) | 149 (88.2%) | 305 (85.9%) |
| often-always | 8 (20.5%) | 20 (13.6%) | 18 (10.7%) | 46 (13%) |
| never-sometimes | 31 (79.5%) | 127 (86.4%) | 150 (89.3%) | 308 (87%) |
| often-always | 20 (51.3%) | 43 (29.1%) | 33 (19.3%) | 96 (26.8%) |
| never-sometimes | 19 (48.7%) | 105 (70.9%) | 138 (80.7%) | 262 (73.2%) |
Legend: RANZCOG Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists; NFATSIH National Faculty of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health of Royal Australian College of General Practitioners; GPs General Practitioners; OBS Obstetricians; * From same sample reported in Bar-Zeev Y. et al. [5].
Associations between clinician groups, and AGSA-RA, and exposures to cannabis (without tobacco), chewing tobacco, e-cigarettes (with nicotine), and second-hand smoke, in 378 Australian GPs and Obstetricians.
| Variable | Cannabis Crude | Cannabis Adjusted † | Chewing Crude | Chewing Adjusted † | E-Cigarette Crude | E-Cigarette Adjusted † | SHS Crude | SHS Adjusted † | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | ||||||
| (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | (95% CI) | ||||||
| NFATISH * | 1 | 1 | 0.01 | 1 | 1 | 0.548 | 1 | 1 | 0.398 | 1 | 1 | 0.064 | |
| RANZCOG GP | 0.33 | 0.34 | 0.54 | 0.56 | 0.68 | 0.52 | 0.39 | 0.49 | |||||
| (0.15, 0.75) | (0.13, 0.85) | (0.19, 1.52) | (0.17, 1.8) | (0.28, 1.68) | (0.21, 1.29) | (0.19, 0.8) | (0.22, 1.11) | ||||||
| RANZCOG OBS | 0.4 | 0.63 | 0.57 | 0.79 | 0.64 | 0.5 | 0.23 | 0.37 | |||||
| (0.18, 0.9) | (0.25, 1.62) | (0.21, 1.57) | (0.24, 2.62) | (0.24, 1.74) | (0.18, 1.39) | (0.11, 0.47) | (0.16, 0.85) | ||||||
| Urban RA1 * | 1 | 1 | 0.103 | 1 | 1 | 0.077 | 1 | 1 | 0.833 | 1 | 1 | 0.406 | |
| Regional RA2 + RA3 | 1.8 | 1.77 | 1.13 | 1.09 | 1.03 | 0.87 | 1.17 | 0.82 | |||||
| (1.12, 2.88) | (1.04, 2.99) | (0.5, 2.55) | (0.46, 2.58) | (0.54, 1.98) | (0.43, 1.74) | (0.7, 1.97) | (0.46, 1.45) | ||||||
| Remote RA 4 + RA5 | 1.84 | 1.06 | 5.67 | 5.02 | 0.77 | 0.56 | 5.04 | 1.87 | |||||
| (0.67, 5.09) | (0.28, 4.05) | (1.9, 16.89) | (1.21, 20.8) | (0.17, 3.5) | (0.06, 5.21) | (1.86, 13.65) | (0.53, 6.54) | ||||||
Legend: RANZCOG Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists; NFATSIH National Faculty of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health of Royal Australian College of General Practitioners; GPs General Practitioners; OBS Obstetricians; SHS second hand smoke; Reference group * NFATSIH GPs, Urban RA1; Note: p-values relate to the global significance of the relevant categorical variable, for brevity only the global p-values for the multivariate models are reported. The confidence interval of the OR better represents the significance of the estimate. † Model adjusted for type of Clinician group, reading of clinical guidelines, location of practice, gender of professional and population constituency.