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Secondhand Smoke Strikes Kids' Lungs
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Many children hospitalized with respiratory illnesses suffer
from secondhand smoke exposure caused by their parents' smoking.
Now, a study by Massachusetts General
Hospital researchers says those hospitalizations can be an ideal
opportunity to talk to parents about how dangerous their smoking
is to their children and to help them quit. The study appears
in the January issue of Pediatrics.
During the four-month study, parents
of children admitted to hospital with respiratory illness were
invited to take part in a smoking cessation program that included
an initial interview, written educational material, nicotine replacement
therapy, phone counseling, and referral to their own family doctor.
There were 71 smoking parents who
took part in the program. Of those, 80 percent completed all the
counseling sessions, and 56 percent used the nicotine replacement
therapy.
After two months, half the parents
reported making an attempt to quit smoking that lasted at least
24 hours, and 20 percent reported sustained tobacco abstinence.
At the two-month point, 27 percent
of the parents reported they were still using nicotine replacement
therapy and 38 percent had talked with their family doctor about
quitting smoking.
The researchers feel the study
findings indicate this group of parents is receptive to messages
about the dangers of smoking.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about secondhand
smoke.
Reference
Source 101
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