Association between parental smoking and child exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in Israel

Environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure in children can cause delayed lung development and lifelong cardiovascular damage. The aim of this study was to measure ETS exposure in children in Israel in 2020-2021 using urinary cotinine (UC) measurements and to assess correlates of ETS exposure, includ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Israel journal of health policy research 2023-12, Vol.12 (1), p.37-37, Article 37
Hauptverfasser: Berman, Tamar, Rorman, Efrat, Groisman, Luda, Keinan-Boker, Lital, Shimony, Tal, Barnett-Itzhaki, Zohar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure in children can cause delayed lung development and lifelong cardiovascular damage. The aim of this study was to measure ETS exposure in children in Israel in 2020-2021 using urinary cotinine (UC) measurements and to assess correlates of ETS exposure, including parental smoking. In the framework of the National Human Biomonitoring Program, spot urine samples and questionnaire data were collected from 166 children aged 4-12 years, during the years 2020-2021. We collected urine samples in 233 adults, 69 of whom were parents of children included in the study. Parents of participating children were asked about parental smoking, child's exposure to ETS and smoking policy at home. Cotinine and creatinine were measured in urine. Creatinine-adjusted and unadjusted urine cotinine (UC) geometric means were calculated. Associations between potential correlates and UC concentrations were analyzed in univariate and multivariate analyses. For 69 child-parent pairs, correlation between child and parental UC was analyzed. Based on urinary cotinine measurement, 65.2% of children of smokers are exposed to ETS, compared to 20.7% of children in non-smoking families. Greater numbers of smokers living in the home (beta = 1.27, p 
ISSN:2045-4015
2045-4015
DOI:10.1186/s13584-023-00585-6