Preconception and Prenatal Smoking among Maine Women: Defining Risk and Determining the Impact of Efforts by Care Providers to Promote Cessation

Author:

Harris David E.,Aboueissa AbouEl-Makarim A.,Sarton Cheryl,Baugh Nancy

Abstract

Introduction: Smoking before and during pregnancy is a risk for women and their babies, but encouraging tobacco abstinence challenges practitioners.Aims: We define correlates of tobacco use around pregnancy and determine the impact of providers’ efforts to encourage abstinence.Methods: We analysed responses (2000 – 2010) from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System questionnaire for Maine, United States, a state with higher than average smoking rates. We performed multivariable logistic regression analysis with demographic and behavioural independent variables, and smoking in the last 3 months before and in the last 3 months of pregnancy as dependent variables.Results: Of 12,409 questionnaire responders, 32% smoked before pregnancy; 60.5% of these women continued during pregnancy. Women were more likely to smoke before pregnancy and to continue during pregnancy if they had a previous birth, were unmarried, had ≤ a high school education, or had a household income ≤ $20,000/year. Pre-pregnancy smokers were more likely to continue smoking during pregnancy if their gestational weight gain was less than recommended and, surprisingly, if they recalled a provider discussion about smoking cessation.Conclusions: We identify women at risk for smoking before and during pregnancy and demonstrate that current tobacco abstinence interventions by providers may not always be effective.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference26 articles.

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2. 11-Year Trends in Pregnancy-Related Health Indicators in Maine – 2000–2010;Harris;Journal of Pregnancy,2014

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4. Control beliefs are related to smoking prevention in prenatal care;Lemola;Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice,2013

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