2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1442-200x.2008.02582.x
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Smoking trends before, during, and after pregnancy among women and their spouses

Abstract: Compared with Western countries, the rate of smoking cessation during pregnancy was relatively high in Japan. It is necessary that smoking cessation intervention and support for men be initiated at the early stages of their spouses' pregnancies. These observations could influence the targeting and design of maternal smoking intervention.

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Cited by 35 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…The current study also did not evaluate the influence of breast-feeding duration or exclusivity on postpartum smoking abstinence. Some research suggests that breast feeding for ≥6 months may have a greater impact on smoking cessation than breast feeding for shorter durations (Kaneko et al, 2008). It is also possible that exclusive breast feeding may be a more effective deterrent of tobacco use than mixed breast/formula feeding because exclusively breast-feeding women who use tobacco would have greater difficulty avoiding or minimizing infant exposure to nicotine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The current study also did not evaluate the influence of breast-feeding duration or exclusivity on postpartum smoking abstinence. Some research suggests that breast feeding for ≥6 months may have a greater impact on smoking cessation than breast feeding for shorter durations (Kaneko et al, 2008). It is also possible that exclusive breast feeding may be a more effective deterrent of tobacco use than mixed breast/formula feeding because exclusively breast-feeding women who use tobacco would have greater difficulty avoiding or minimizing infant exposure to nicotine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The findings of several studies suggest that breast feeding may protect against postpartum smoking relapse (Kaneko et al, 2008;Letourneau et al, 2007;Martin et al, 2008;O'Campo, Faden, Brown, & Gielen, 1992;Ratner, Johnson, & Bottorff, 1999;Ratner, Johnson, Bottorff, Dahinten, & Hall, 2000). However, the methodologies predominant in this literature often do not permit a clear inference because smoking and breast feeding are measured during either the same or the overlapping periods of time without identifying the timing of the status change (Kaneko et al;Martin et al;O'Campo et al;Ratner et al, 1999Ratner et al, , 2000.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The majority of research has focused on smoking relapse postpartum (Colman and Joyce, 2003;Gyllstrom et al, 2012;Kaneko et al, 2008;Park et al, 2009;Ruger et al, 2008;Tong et al, 2008;Tran et al, 2013;Yasuda et al, 2013), with only a handful of studies looking at postpartum alcohol relapse (Ebrahim et al, 1998;Fleming, 2007a, 2007b;Nayak and Kaskutas, 2004). One of these studies found that at six to 12 weeks postpartum 37.8% of women who were frequent drinkers before pregnancy reported postpartum risky drinking, with 18% reporting heavy episodic drinking, 5% frequent drinking only and 15% reporting both behaviors (Jagodzinski and Fleming, 2007a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, up to 45% of pregnant smokers manage to quit smoking on their own (Lumley et al, 2009). A few studies suggest that pregnancy and childbirth may also be a ''teachable moment'' for smoking cessation among expectant or new fathers because of heightened awareness of the negative health impact of their smoking (Gage et al, 2007;Pollak et al, 2010), leading to positive changes in their smoking behaviors (Brenner & Mielck, 1993;Hyssala, Rautava, Sillanpaa, & Tuominen, 1992;Kaneko et al, 2008); however, one U.S. study found that 80% of low-income expectant fathers who smoked were in the precontemplation or contemplation stage of smoking cessation (Everett et al, 2005), underscoring the challenges of addressing male-partner smoking during the perinatal period.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%