Parental Smoking and Infant Respiratory Infection: How Important Is Not Smoking in the Same Room With the Baby?
Leigh Blizzard, PhD,
Anne-Louise Ponsonby, PhD,
Terence Dwyer, MD,
Alison Venn, PhD and
Jennifer A. Cochrane, BA
The authors are with the Menzies Centre for Population Health Research, University of Tasmania, Hobart. Anne-Louise Ponsonby is also with the National Centre for Epidemiology and Public Health, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Leigh Blizzard, PhD, Menzies Centre for Population Health Research, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 23, Hobart 7001, Australia (e-mail: leigh.blizzard{at}utas.edu.au).
Objectives. We sought to quantify the effect of good smokinghygiene on infant risk of respiratory tract infection in thefirst 12 months of life.
Methods. A cohort of 4486 infants in Tasmania, Australia, wasfollowed from birth to 12 months of age for hospitalizationwith respiratory infection. Case ascertainment was 98.2%.
Results. Relative to the infants of mothers who smoked postpartumbut never in the same room with their infants, risk of hospitalizationwas 56% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 13%, 119%) higher ifthe mother smoked in the same room with the infant, 73% (95%CI = 18%, 157%) higher if the mother smoked when holding theinfant, and 95% (95% CI = 28%, 298%) higher if the mother smokedwhile feeding the infant.
Conclusions. Parents who smoke should not smoke with their infantspresent in the same room.
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