We examined the efficacy of a pediatric emergency visit-based screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) condition compared to a control condition (Healthy Habits Control, HHC) to help parental smokers quit smoking. We enrolled 750 parental smokers who presented to the pediatric emergency setting with their child into a two-group randomized controlled clinical trial. SBIRT participants received brief cessation coaching, quitting resources, and up to 12-weeks of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). HHC participants received healthy lifestyle coaching and resources. The primary outcome was point-prevalence tobacco abstinence at six weeks (T1) and six months (T2). The mean (SD) age of parents was 31.8 (7.7) years, and 86.8...
Abstract Background Addressing children’s tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) remains a public health prior...
Objective: To examine whether telephone counselling based on the stages of change component of Trans...
Tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure are among the most important preventable causes of premature ...
Abstract Background Involuntary exposure to secondhand smoke (SHSe) is an important cause of morbidi...
Background: Pediatricians following clinical practice guidelines for tobacco intervention (“As...
ABSTRACT. Objective. To evaluate the feasibility of implementing a smoking cessation intervention fo...
Background: Every U.S. state has a free telephone quitline that tobacco users can access to receive ...
INTRODUCTION The study objective was to assess tobacco screening and cessation counseling practices ...
Background It is estimated that 20-50% of adult smokers reside with children, and the majority of t...
Parental tobacco use is a serious health issue for all family members. Child health care clinicians ...
ObjectivePediatric providers play an important role in parental and youth smoking cessation. The goa...
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 Background Smoking is the world's fourth most common risk factor for disease, the leading p...
Research has demonstrated that parents who smoke are often inadvertent sources of their children s f...
Abstract Background Addressing children’s tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) remains a public health prior...
Objective: To examine whether telephone counselling based on the stages of change component of Trans...
Tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure are among the most important preventable causes of premature ...
Abstract Background Involuntary exposure to secondhand smoke (SHSe) is an important cause of morbidi...
Background: Pediatricians following clinical practice guidelines for tobacco intervention (“As...
ABSTRACT. Objective. To evaluate the feasibility of implementing a smoking cessation intervention fo...
Background: Every U.S. state has a free telephone quitline that tobacco users can access to receive ...
INTRODUCTION The study objective was to assess tobacco screening and cessation counseling practices ...
Background It is estimated that 20-50% of adult smokers reside with children, and the majority of t...
Parental tobacco use is a serious health issue for all family members. Child health care clinicians ...
ObjectivePediatric providers play an important role in parental and youth smoking cessation. The goa...
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 Background Smoking is the world's fourth most common risk factor for disease, the leading p...
Research has demonstrated that parents who smoke are often inadvertent sources of their children s f...
Abstract Background Addressing children’s tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) remains a public health prior...
Objective: To examine whether telephone counselling based on the stages of change component of Trans...
Tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure are among the most important preventable causes of premature ...