| Literature DB >> 30126404 |
Vicki Myers1, Shoshana Shiloh2, Laura Rosen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is estimated that around 40% of children worldwide are exposed to tobacco smoke, largely by their parents. Discrepancies between biochemical measures of exposure and parental report imply that parents may be under-reporting children's exposure. Previous research has shown that there may be a fundamental misunderstanding among smoking parents as to what exactly exposure is and in what circumstances it occurs.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Parents; Perceptions; Secondhand smoke; Tobacco smoke exposure; Validation study
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30126404 PMCID: PMC6102809 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5928-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Conceptual model: Parental perceptions of children’s exposure to tobacco smoke. [Reprinted from Rosen et al. Parental Perceptions and Misconceptions of Child Tobacco Smoke Exposure, Nicotine & Tobacco Research 2017 doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx169 by permission of Oxford University Press (licence no. 4399291196149)]
Fig. 2Example items from the PPE tool
Description of sample
| Mean (SD); n | Range | IQR | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 34.79 (5.58); 211 | 21–55 | 31–38 |
| Number of Children | 1.97 (0.89); 219 | 1–4 | 1–3 |
| Number of cigarettes/day (answering parent) | 10.41 (6.57); 73 | 1–30 | 5–15 |
| Number of cigarettes/day (partner) | 11.78 (7.86); 64 | 1–30 | 5–15 |
| Sum number of cigarettes/day (mother + father) | 15.54 (11.34); 96 | 2–55 | 6–20 |
| N | % | ||
| Gender | Fathers | 30 | 13.6% |
| Mothers | 190 | 86.4% | |
| Smoking status | Smokers | 72 | 32.7% |
| Non-smokers | 116 | 52.7% | |
| Ex-smokers | 32 | 14.5% | |
| Partner smoking status | Smoking partner | 60 | 27.3% |
| Ex-smoker partner | 28 | 12.7% | |
| SES | Below average | 33 | 15% |
| Average | 106 | 48.2% | |
| Above average | 78 | 35.5% | |
| Mother tongue | Hebrew | 187 | 83.1% |
| Russian | 16 | 7.1% | |
| Arabic | 3 | 1.3% | |
| English | 8 | 3.6% | |
| Other (not specified) | 10 | 4.4% |
Mean Number of cigarettes/day = mean of smoking respondents
Factor labels and Cronbach scores
| Factor | Label | Description | No of items (loadings range) | Cronbach’s Alpha |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Second-hand exposure | Exposure by active smoking in car, home, outdoors | 9 (.627–.894) | 0.934 |
| 2 | Third-hand exposure | Exposure after someone has smoked in car or home at various times | 5 (.702–.928) | 0.921 |
| 3 | Perceived knowledge/certainty | Perceived knowledge, certainty and difficulty answering | 3 (.717–.872) | 0.690 |
| 4 | Sensory exposure | Sight and smell | 3 (−.706- -.847) | 0.808 |
| 5 | Time perceptions of exposure | Time taken for smoke to disperse after smoking | 2 (.884–.919) | 0.857 |
| 6 | Space perceptions of exposure | Distance smoke travels | 1 (.829) | – |
Item specific statistics can be provided upon request
Fig. 3Scatterplot of the correlation between PPE and PPR
Spearman’s Correlations between PPE subscales and PPR score
| Factor 1 Secondhand exposure | Factor 2 Thirdhand exposure | Factor 3 Perceived knowledge | Factor 4 Sensory | Factor 5 Time | Factor 6 Distance | PPR score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Factor 1 | 0.534* | 0.150 | 0.528* | 0.439* | 0.201* | 0.613* | |
| Factor 2 | 0.176* | 0.596* | 0.546* | 0.073 | 0.646* | ||
| Factor 3 | 0.235* | 0.166* | 0.165* | 0.262* | |||
| Factor 4 | 0.398* | 0.139 | 0.877* | ||||
| Factor 5 | 0.151 | 0.514* | |||||
| Factor 6 | 0.165* |
*signifies p ≤ 0.05
Smokers versus non-smokers PPE scores
| Mean PPE sum (SD) | Mean PPE score | Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | Factor 4 | Factor 5 | Factor 6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smokers | 85.58 (19.17) | 5.03 (1.13) | 5.09 (1.32) | 5.09 (1.49) | 4.62 (1.27) | 4.86 (1.38) | 3.23 (1.76) | 3.35 (1.84) |
| Non-Smokers | 100.41 (12.70) | 5.91 (.75) | 5.97 (.84) | 5.84 (1.06) | 4.41 (1.57) | 5.80 (1.10) | 4.06 (1.80) | 3.46 (1.74) |
| Ex-smokers | 98.09 (19.38) | 5.77 (1.14) | 5.84 (1.21) | 5.71 (1.38) | 4.47 (1.43) | 5.65 (1.28) | 4.26 (1.64) | 4.04 (1.77) |
| < 0.001 | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | .625 | < 0.001 | .012 | .267 |
PPE parental perceptions of exposure, PPE sum sum of all item scores, PPE score mean score, that is sum divided by the number of items answered