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. 2007 Jun;9(6):663-70.
doi: 10.1080/14622200701365277.

Staying smoke free: an intervention to prevent postpartum relapse

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Staying smoke free: an intervention to prevent postpartum relapse

Gina M French et al. Nicotine Tob Res. 2007 Jun.

Abstract

This pilot study evaluated the effectiveness of a nurse-delivered home-visiting program during the postpartum period that included a low-intensity smoking relapse-prevention intervention. A prospective two-group design was used. Participants were women who had quit smoking during their pregnancy. They were invited to participate during postpartum hospitalization on a university hospital postpartum ward. A brief intervention during postpartum hospitalization, a home visit, and two follow-up phone calls over a 1- to 2-month period were compared with a routine home visit without any prescribed focus on tobacco use. The main outcome was biochemically verified smoking abstinence at 3 and 6 months postenrollment. Abstinence was defined as a salivary cotinine level of 14 ng/ml or less. At 3 months postenrollment, 26.4% of the intervention group were classified as abstinent, compared with 12.4% of the comparison group (OR = 2.4, 95% CI = 1.16-4.98). At 6 months, the proportion of the intervention group categorized as abstinent was 21.5%, compared with 10.2% of comparison group participants (OR = 2.5, 95% CI = 1.13-5.71). Greater than three times as many in the intervention group remained abstinent at both times (18.2%), compared with the comparison group (5.2%; OR = 2.4, 95% CI = 1.16-4.93). The effectiveness of this brief, low-cost, and potentially replicable intervention in improving the rate of persistent postpartum smoke-free status for women who quit smoking during pregnancy is encouraging. A randomized trial of the approach is warranted.

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