Secondhand smoke exposure of children at home and prevalence of parental smoking following implementation of the new tobacco control law in Macao
Autor: | H.L. Wang, W.S. Kuok, C.P. Wu, W.J. Liang, H.Y. Deng, W.L. Lam, Z.L. Zheng |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Parents Maternal smoking Prevalence Mothers Smoking Prevention 010501 environmental sciences complex mixtures 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Surveys and Questionnaires Environmental health Humans Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Child Secondhand smoke 0105 earth and related environmental sciences School education Smoke Macau business.industry Smoking Tobacco control Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Classification tree analysis Environmental Exposure General Medicine Middle Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Law Government Regulation population characteristics Female Tobacco Smoke Pollution Smoking ban business |
Zdroj: | Public Health. 144:57-63 |
ISSN: | 0033-3506 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.puhe.2016.11.018 |
Popis: | Objective To investigate secondhand smoke exposure (SHS) of children at home and the prevalence of parental smoking after implementation of the new tobacco control law in Macao. This study explored whether the smoking ban in public places in Macao has decreased the prevalence of smoking or led to increased SHS exposure of children at home. As smokers cannot smoke in public places any more, they may smoke at home more frequently; a displacement effect of smoke-free legislation. Study design Cross-sectional survey. Methods This study surveyed 337 fathers and 538 mothers. Questions from a subset of key questions from the Global Adult Tobacco Survey (2nd edition) were applied to assess the SHS exposure of children and the prevalence of parental smoking since the smoking ban. A classification tree analysis was used to analyse the factors increasing SHS exposure of children. Results The prevalence of SHS exposure in children at home was 41.3%. The prevalence rates of paternal and maternal smoking were 43.7% and 3.8%, respectively. Compared with data reported by the Health Bureau of Macao SAR in 2011, the prevalence of parental smoking and the prevalence of SHS exposure of children at home have not decreased since the smoking ban. Analysis of the factors increasing the prevalence of SHS exposure of children indicated that fathers with an education level below high school were more likely to contribute to this increase, compared with fathers with a high school education or more (48.2% vs 32.4%, respectively). In addition, fathers represented the majority of smokers at home, accounting for 92.0% of 415 smoking parents. The prevalence of paternal smoking (82.0%) in the group of children with SHS exposure was much higher than that in the unexposed group (16.7%, Chi-squared test = 367.199, P = 0.000). The SHS exposure of children increased consistently with the decrease in paternal education level. This was consistent with the increasing prevalence of paternal smoking as paternal education level decreased. SHS exposure was most common among children whose fathers had an education level below high school and whose mothers were aged ≤29 years (75.0%). Conclusions This study did not find any decline in the prevalence of parental smoking after the smoking ban. These parents were more likely to smoke at home after the ban, leading to more frequent SHS exposure for their children. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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