Background: Pediatricians following clinical practice guidelines for tobacco intervention (“Ask, Advise, and Refer” [AAR]) can motivate parents to reduce child tobacco smoke exposure (TSE). However, brief clinic interventions are unable to provide the more intensive, evidence-based behavioral treatments that facilitate the knowledge, skills, and confidence that parents need to both reduce child TSE and quit smoking. We hypothesized that a multilevel treatment model integrating pediatric clinic-level AAR with individual-level, telephone counseling would promote greater long-term (12-month) child TSE reduction and parent smoking cessation than clinic-level AAR alone. Methods: Pediatricians were trained to implement AAR with parent...
Background: Every U.S. state has a free telephone quitline that tobacco users can access to receive ...
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this work was to determine whether a pediatric practice-based smoking prev...
Children are particularly vulnerable to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). There is no routine suppo...
Background: Pediatricians following clinical practice guidelines for tobacco intervention (“As...
Abstract Background Addressing children’s tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) remains a public health prior...
Background: Children exposed to cigarette smoke (environmental tobacco smoke) are at greater risk of...
Importance: Reducing child exposure to tobacco smoke is a public health priority. Guidelines recomme...
UNLABELLED: With over 40% of children in the USA exposed to tobacco smoke, the AAP recommends tobacc...
We examined the efficacy of a pediatric emergency visit-based screening, brief intervention, and ref...
Background: Children's exposure to other people's cigarette smoke (environmental tobacco smoke, ...
Background: Exposure to other people’s cigarette smoke (environmental tobacco smoke, or ETS) i...
Abstract Introduction Smoking and tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) leads to 480,000 deaths and over $289...
Tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure are among the most important preventable causes of premature ...
Research has demonstrated that parents who smoke are often inadvertent sources of their children s f...
Introduction. Smokefree for Kansas Kids is a program designedto train pediatric clinic staff to asse...
Background: Every U.S. state has a free telephone quitline that tobacco users can access to receive ...
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this work was to determine whether a pediatric practice-based smoking prev...
Children are particularly vulnerable to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). There is no routine suppo...
Background: Pediatricians following clinical practice guidelines for tobacco intervention (“As...
Abstract Background Addressing children’s tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) remains a public health prior...
Background: Children exposed to cigarette smoke (environmental tobacco smoke) are at greater risk of...
Importance: Reducing child exposure to tobacco smoke is a public health priority. Guidelines recomme...
UNLABELLED: With over 40% of children in the USA exposed to tobacco smoke, the AAP recommends tobacc...
We examined the efficacy of a pediatric emergency visit-based screening, brief intervention, and ref...
Background: Children's exposure to other people's cigarette smoke (environmental tobacco smoke, ...
Background: Exposure to other people’s cigarette smoke (environmental tobacco smoke, or ETS) i...
Abstract Introduction Smoking and tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) leads to 480,000 deaths and over $289...
Tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure are among the most important preventable causes of premature ...
Research has demonstrated that parents who smoke are often inadvertent sources of their children s f...
Introduction. Smokefree for Kansas Kids is a program designedto train pediatric clinic staff to asse...
Background: Every U.S. state has a free telephone quitline that tobacco users can access to receive ...
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this work was to determine whether a pediatric practice-based smoking prev...
Children are particularly vulnerable to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). There is no routine suppo...