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Second Hand Tobacco Smoke clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04791722 Completed - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Optimizing Smoke-free Residential Housing Policies

Start date: May 20, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project will be conducted to investigate activities on housing-related health and safety issues. The focus of this project is the development of evidence-based approaches to implement smoke-free policies to reduce harms associated with exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS).

NCT ID: NCT03605641 Completed - Clinical trials for Second Hand Tobacco Smoke

Study to Evaluate Constituents in Exhaled Breath and Room Air From Use of E-vapor Products and Conventional Cigarettes

Start date: September 17, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

An open-label, single center, three-arm observational study to examine emissions from e-cigarettes versus conventional cigarettes under three environmental settings of typical residential, office and hospitality facilities.

NCT ID: NCT03567512 Completed - Clinical trials for Second Hand Tobacco Smoke

Reducing Second-hand Smoke Exposure Among Young Children in Rural China

Start date: March 20, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Second-hand smoking (SHS) is a health hazard to infants and children, in whom it is associated with lower respiratory tract infections, wheezing, cough, middle ear infections and sudden infant death syndrome. The high prevalence of smoking in adults in China, 52.9% among men, 2.4% among women, results in many children being exposed to SHS at home. Data on the effectiveness of evidence-based smoking hygiene intervention to reduce SHS exposure among young children (e.g., aged 5 or below) is lacking in China. Children in the rural setting are more exposed to SHS due to the lack of tobacco control policy initiative in the rural setting and the high prevalence of smoking among the rural public. In the proposed project we aim to examine the effectiveness of a protection motivation theory-based smoking hygiene intervention (SHI), delivered by community health worker (CHW) in 6 different contacts, to reduce SHS exposure among young children in two rural areas of China: Taizhou city (Zhejiang Province) and Dali city (Yunnan province). The results of this study will provide clinical evidence for the development of CHW-delivered interventions designed to reduce exposure to SHS and related morbidity and mortality among children in rural China. The successful results could also be used to draft guidelines for health promotion interventions, which could be implemented as a policy for all primary health care settings in rural China and other developing countries.

NCT ID: NCT03476837 Completed - Tobacco Use Clinical Trials

Reducing Tobacco Exposures Among African American Women and Children

FRESH
Start date: January 15, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Secondhand smoke exposure in the home can causes sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), asthma, respiratory illnesses, and ear infections in children. In addition to cigarette smoke, exposure to other tobacco products can further compromise the safety of children in the home. This study aims to reduce the burden of multiple tobacco exposures, improve access to preventive care, and reduce the disproportionate risk for chronic diseases, including cancer, among African American women and children living in the Arkansas Delta region. Our central hypothesis is that messages delivered by a community health worker that aim to modify knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, and subjective norms may influence the perceived threat of tobacco exposures and provide cues for African American women caregivers to implement comprehensive smokefree policies to protect their children from the harms of tobacco and in-turn, influence their quitting.

NCT ID: NCT03151421 Completed - Tobacco Use Clinical Trials

Air Quality Feedback to Reduce Second-hand Smoke (SHS) Exposure in the Home

TackSHSWP4
Start date: September 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a European study which is part of a larger research project (The TackSHS project) funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (Grant Agreement No 681040) and led by the Catalan Institute of Oncology. This study will examine the efficacy of using personalised air quality measurements in homes of smokers to encourage behaviour-change towards having a smoke-free home environment. Building on recent quantitative and qualitative work showing that feedback of second-hand smoke (SHS) measurement information can help motivate smokers to change their behaviour. This study will develop a targeted intervention for use with socio-economically deprived smokers in four countries (Scotland, Spain, Greece, Italy) across the EU. Two-hundred smokers (50 in each country) will be recruited and offered low-cost, simple to operate particle counting instruments to measure and log SHS levels in their home for a period of 30 days. During this time near real-time, personalised feedback will be provided to, and discussed with, the smoker along with target-setting and exploration of suitable methods of behaviour-change. Feedback will be given via text message to mobile phones, emails and personal voice calls. A final visit will gather data on changes made while a proportion of participants (10-20%) in each country will take part in a further qualitative interview by phone to gather data on their experience of the intervention. Study outcomes will include quantitative measures such as changes in average and maximum fine particulate matter (PM2.5) concentrations and self-declared household smoking rules, while qualitative data will be gathered using questionnaire and interview to explore what elements of the intervention were useful/unhelpful, particularly well/poorly understood, and what were the barriers for those who did not make changes. This WP will provide a comprehensive database of baseline measurements of SHS concentrations in home settings from across the EU with the potential to generate over 8 million minutes of measurements of household air quality. Analysis of the differences by country and possible determinants of exposure will be carried out.

NCT ID: NCT03074734 Completed - Asthma Clinical Trials

Health Effects of Secondhand Smoke Exposure in Outdoor Smoking Areas in Patients With COPD and Asthma ( TackSHSWP5 )

TackSHSWP5
Start date: June 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Within the TackSHS project (H2020 project grant agreement No 681040), we will conduct a clinical research study, aiming at: i) to measure respiratory health effects when exposed to secondhand smoke (SHS) in patients with asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD); ii) to investigate exposure levels to SHS in smoking areas provided by bars, casinos, bingo halls, etc. The study will involve 60 patients (volunteers) in three European countries: Czech Republic, Ireland, and Spain, recruiting 20 patients in each participating country (10 COPD and 10 asthma patients).

NCT ID: NCT02928536 Completed - Clinical trials for Second Hand Tobacco Smoke

The TackSHS Survey: a Pan-European Study on SHS

Start date: December 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Within the TackSHS project (H2020 project grant agreement No 681040), we will conduct a European cross-sectional study, aiming at i) estimating prevalence and investigating determinants of smoking, e-cigarette use and exposure to SHS and to e-cigarette aerosol; ii) analyzing the attitudes, perceptions and behaviours of the adult European population towards policies to limit SHS exposure; iii) comparing selected smoking-related data between TackSHS and a previously conducted pan-European survey; iv) assessing mortality and morbidity from selected respiratory and cardiovascular diseases attributable to SHS exposure among adults and children in Europe; v) quantifying the economic burden associated to the exposure to SHS and e-cigarette aerosol in Europe. Overall, approximately 12,000 individuals aged 15 years or over will be enrolled in 12 different European countries (BG, DE, ES, FR, GR, IE, IT, LV, PL, PT, RO, UK). Surveys will be representative of the country-specific population in terms of sex, age, and socio-economic characteristics.

NCT ID: NCT02602288 Completed - Nicotine Dependence Clinical Trials

Babies Living Safe and Smokefree

BLiSS
Start date: February 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to develop and test the efficacy of a multilevel, multimodal intervention designed to modify maternal smoking behavior to reduce children's exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke (primary outcome) and promote their smoking cessation (secondary outcome). Low-income mothers who smoke will be enrolled. Mothers will be recruited from the supplemental nutrition program, Women, Infants and Children (WIC) clinics. All mothers visiting WIC clinics will receive a clinic-level intervention, which consists of nutrition counselors following an "ask, advise, and refer" protocol to identify if their children are exposed to secondhand tobacco smoke, advise mothers who smoke about the harms of such exposure and the benefits of reducing exposure, and referring mothers to the trial. Screened eligible mothers will be consented and randomized to an attention control condition focused on nutrition (CTL) or to an experimental (EXP) multimodal behavioral intervention that integrates telebased counseling to promote the reduction of child secondhand smoke exposure (SHSE) and maternal smoking with an adjunct smoking cessation mobile app and nicotine replacement therapy use. The investigators will test the primary hypothesis that relative to children in the CTL condition, those in the EXP condition will have lower exposure SHSE as measured by mothers' reports and child cotinine levels. The investigators will also test the secondary hypothesis that relative to mothers in the CTL condition, those in the EXP condition will have higher bioverified 7-day point prevalence quit rates. In addition, the study will: (a) evaluate if specific psychosocial and behavioral factors-- social support, urge coping skills, self-efficacy, and SHSe protective behaviors--mediate the effects of the EXP intervention on outcomes and (b) explore whether other residential smokers, level of nicotine dependence, depressive/anxious symptoms, weight concerns, intervention dosage, and pregnancy status predict outcomes and moderate treatment effects.

NCT ID: NCT02557919 Completed - Clinical trials for Tobacco Use Cessation

Families Reduce Exposure to Smoke at Home

FRESH
Start date: September 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project proposes to evaluate the effectiveness of training Head Start staff to discuss tobacco use, shs reduction and cessation in their existing encounters with parents in reducing tobacco use and exposure. Understanding the facilitators and barriers to integrating the intervention into the Head Start system will support future efforts to address tobacco use and exposure in families with small children.

NCT ID: NCT02281864 Completed - Clinical trials for Tobacco Use Cessation

Interventions to Help Smoking Parents of Inpatients Reduce Exposure (INSPIRE)

INSPIRE
Start date: December 10, 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Children who are hospitalized are especially vulnerable to the effects of tobacco use and dependence among their caregivers, and they are more likely to be exposed than children who are not hospitalized. Hospitalization is an important teachable moment for health care providers to intervene with tobacco dependent parents, and help them reduce their child's exposure, potentially improving outcomes after hospitalization, and their future health. Understanding the best way to approach and intervene with these families will provide the investigator with the necessary information to create a sustainable intervention that can be disseminated to hospitals across the country that provide pediatric care, and to ultimately make a significant improvement in the health of children.