A pilot study of concurrent lead and cotinine screening for childhood tobacco smoke exposure: effect on parental smoking
- PMID: 23971524
- PMCID: PMC4110892
- DOI: 10.4278/ajhp.120912-ARB-445
A pilot study of concurrent lead and cotinine screening for childhood tobacco smoke exposure: effect on parental smoking
Abstract
Purpose: To investigate whether a biomarker screening approach for tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) conducted concurrently with lead screening at well-child visits would increase parental smoking cessation and implementation of home smoking restrictions.
Design: Observational, quasi-experimental.
Setting: Pediatric clinic in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Subjects: Eighty parents who smoked and their children presenting for well-child visits.
Intervention: Children in the intervention group had serum cotinine measured with lead screening. Laboratory results were sent to providers and parents and a counselor proactively contacted parents to offer an eight-session telephone intervention to help parents stop smoking. The comparison group, a historical control, received usual care.
Measures: Parental smoking, engagement in tobacco treatment, and home and car smoking policies 8 weeks later.
Analysis: Mean/standard deviation for continuous data or frequency/percentage for categorical data.
Results: Eighty-four percent of eligible parents agreed to have their child tested for TSE along with lead testing. Measurable cotinine was identified in 93% of children. More parents in the intervention group received tobacco treatment than in the comparison group (74% vs. 0%) and more parents reported 7-day point-prevalent abstinence from smoking at 8 weeks (29% vs. 3%).
Conclusion: These data demonstrate the feasibility of adding cotinine measurement to routine well-child lead screening to document TSE in small children. Data suggest providing this information to parents increases engagement in tobacco treatment and prompts smoking cessation.
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