Abstract

BackgroundInvoluntary exposure to secondhand smoke (SHSe) is an important cause of morbidity in children who present to the pediatric emergency department (PED) and urgent care (UC). SHSe interventions delivered in the PED and UC would benefit both the smoker and child, but there have been no large trials testing the efficacy of such interventions. The Healthy Families program is the first randomized controlled trial to test whether a screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) intervention delivered in the PED and UC will be effective in decreasing SHSe in children and increasing cessation in smokers.Methods/designThis trial uses a randomized, two-group design in which caregiver-smokers of children 0–17 years old are recruited from the PED and UC. Eligible caregiver-smokers are randomized to either the: 1) SBIRT Condition with face-to-face, tailored counseling that focuses on the child’s illness, the importance of reducing child SHSe, caregiver smoking cessation, and the option to receive nicotine replacement therapy; or 2) Healthy Habits Control Condition which includes face-to-face, tailored attention control “5–2–1-0” counseling that focuses on improving the child’s health. Dyadic assessments are conducted in-person at baseline, and via email, phone, or in-person at 6-weeks and 6-months. The primary outcomes are biochemically-verified, 7-day point prevalence and prolonged smoking abstinence. Secondary outcomes are cigarettes smoked per week, 24 h quit attempts, and biochemically validated child SHSe at each time point. The costs of this intervention will also be analyzed.DiscussionThis study will test an innovative, multilevel intervention designed to reduce child SHSe and increase smoking cessation in caregivers. If effective and routinely used, this SBIRT model could reach at least one million smokers a year in the U.S., resulting in significant reductions in caregivers’ tobacco use, SHSe-related pediatric illness, and healthcare costs in this population of children.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02531594. Date of registration: August 4, 2015.

Highlights

  • DiscussionThis study will test an innovative, multilevel intervention designed to reduce child secondhand smoke (SHSe) and increase smoking cessation in caregivers

  • Involuntary exposure to secondhand smoke (SHSe) is an important cause of morbidity in children who present to the pediatric emergency department (PED) and urgent care (UC)

  • Our research has found that among children who visit the emergency settings of the Pediatric Emergency Department (PED) and Urgent Care (UC), there is high prevalence of caregivers who smoke and children of these caregivers have high levels of SHSe that may be equivalent to that of active smokers [4, 5]

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Summary

Discussion

This is the first RCT to test the effectiveness of an emergency setting-based intervention on child SHSe reduction and caregiver smoking cessation intervention compared to an active control condition. This intervention has the potential to improve the health and reduce tobacco-related morbidity of both caregivers and children. The proposed project represents a transformation in the use of the pediatric emergency visit to conduct theoretically-grounded research in this unique setting that can be used to target and improve the health of both adult smokers and children.

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