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Protecting the Vulnerable: The Importance of Effective Parental Tobacco-Dependence Treatment During Prenatal and Newborn Care

To cite this article:
Kelly K. Adams, Ashley Beem, Elizabeth Diener, and T. Allen Merritt. Pediatric Allergy, Immunology, and Pulmonology. -Not available-, ahead of print. doi:10.1089/ped.2011.0111.

Online Ahead of Print: December 22, 2011

Author information

Kelly K. Adams, M.D., M.P.H.,1 Ashley Beem, B.S.,2 Elizabeth Diener, B.S.,2 and T. Allen Merritt, M.D., M.H.A.1
1Pediatrics/Division of Neonatology, School of Medicine Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California.
2School of Medicine Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California.
Address correspondence to:
T. Allen Merritt, M.D., M.H.A.
Division of Neonatology
Department of Pediatrics
Loma Linda University Children's Hospital
Coleman Pavilion
11175 Campus Street, Suite 11121
Loma Linda, California 92350
E-mail:
Received for publication October 24, 2011
accepted after revision October 29, 2011

ABSTRACT

Tobacco use among pregnant women, as well as second- and third-hand smoke exposure of their infants, translates into the startling fact that more than one third of American children live with at least one parent who smokes cigarettes daily. Maternal smoking or second-hand smoke exposure during pregnancy is deleterious to the mother's health and contributes to prematurity, low birth-weight infants, and increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and recurrent wheezing during the first year of life. Pregnant women who stop tobacco use during pregnancy are at high risk for postpartum relapse frequently associated with a partner who smokes tobacco, stress, poverty, and lack of social and medical support to remain tobacco free. Enhanced efforts to identify and support pregnant women who smoke, and to implement strategies to prevent exposure of their fetus and newborn to the hazards of tobacco-smoke exposure, are paramount in our public health efforts to eliminate health disparities in the United States. We discuss the critical elements of programs to assist mothers to stop smoking during pregnancy and toward family efforts to maintain a smoke-free environment for their infant.

Postpartum interventions, whether in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), newborn nursery, or postnatal care setting, can provide assistance that women need to remain smoke free, to educate spouses or significant others and their families, and to aide in establishing goals of maintaining a tobacco smoke-free home and car. Physicians and other perinatal healthcare providers have a duty to identify pregnant women who smoke for “meaningful use” in the electronic medical record, and to provide advice and assistance in evidence-based smoking interventions in obstetrical care settings. Pediatricians, neonatologists, and others providing postpartum, “normal” nursery or NICU care have an opportunity to protect infants and young children from second- and third-hand smoke exposure by assisting their parents and family members in maintaining a tobacco-free environment to improve the health of infants, toddlers, and young children.

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