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      Factors Influencing Exposure to Secondhand Smoke: Passive Inhalation in Student Nurses

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          Abstract

          Objectives

          To examine the factors affecting passive exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) in non-smoking student nurses.

          Methods

          A cross-sectional study was performed in 196 college students who had not smoked cigarettes in the past 12 months. Urinary cotinine levels were examined to identify exposure to SHS, and social factors were identified that influenced exposure to SHS, including requests that smokers extinguish cigarettes. Logistic regression analysis was used to predict the factors influencing SHS.

          Results

          Urinary cotinine measurements showed that 32 students (16.3%) were exposed to SHS. Risk factors that increased exposure to SHS affected 80 students (40.8%) in the previous 7 days. Students who were exposed to SHS were 4.45-times more likely to have increased urinary cotinine levels than those who were not exposed. Students who asked others to extinguish their cigarettes were 0.34 times less likely to test positive than those who did not.

          Conclusion

          Urinary cotinine was a useful biomarker for identifying exposure to SHS, with respect to the influence of demographic, health-related, and smoking-related factors. In non-smoking nursing students, avoiding exposure to SHS was attributed to self-assertive behavior by requesting smokers to extinguish cigarettes.

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          Most cited references27

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          Individual, social-normative, and policy predictors of smoking cessation: a multilevel longitudinal analysis.

          We assessed the prospective impact of individual, social-normative, and policy predictors of quit attempts and smoking cessation among Massachusetts adults. We interviewed a representative sample of current and recent smokers in Massachusetts by telephone in 2001 through 2002 and then again twice at 2-year intervals. The unit of analysis was the 2-year transition from wave 1 to wave 2 and from wave 2 to wave 3. Predictors of quit attempts and abstinence of longer than 3 months were analyzed using multilevel analysis. Predictors included individual, social-normative, and policy factors. Multivariate analyses of 2-year transitions showed that perceptions of strong antismoking town norms were predictive of abstinence (odds ratio = 2.06; P < .01). Household smoking bans were the only policy associated with abstinence, but smoking bans at one's worksite were significant predictors of quit attempts. Although previous research showed a strong relation between local policy and norms, we found no observable, prospective impact of local policy on smoking cessation over 2 years. Our findings provide clear support for the importance of strong antismoking social norms as a facilitator of smoking cessation.
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            Modeling the Underlying Predicting Factors of Tobacco Smoking among Adolescents

            Background: With regard to the willing and starting tobacco smoking among young people in Iran. The aim of the study was to model the underlying factors in predicting the behavior of tobacco smoking among employed youth and students in Iran. Methods: In this analytical cross-sectional study, based on a random cluster sampling were recruited 850 high school students, employed and unemployed youth age ranged between 14 and 19 yr from Iran. The data of demographic and tobacco smoking related variables were acquired via a self-administered questionnaire. A series of univariate and multivariate logistic regressions were performed respectively for computing un-adjusted and adjusted Odds Ratios utilizing SPSS 17 software. Results: A number of 189 persons (25.6%) were smoker in the study and the mean smoking initiation age was 13.93 (SD= 2.21). In addition, smoker friend, peer persistence, leaving home, and smoking in one and six month ago were obtained as independent predictors of tobacco smoking. Conclusions: The education programs on resistance skills against the persistence of the peers, improvement in health programs by governmental interference and policy should be implemented.
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              An experimental investigation of assertive training in a group setting

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Osong Public Health Res Perspect
                Osong Public Health Res Perspect
                kphrp1
                Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives
                Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
                2210-9099
                2233-6052
                April 2019
                : 10
                : 2
                : 78-84
                Affiliations
                [a ]Division of Nursing Science, University of Suwon, Hwaseong, Korea
                [b ]Department of Laboratory Medicine, Center for Diagnostic Oncology, Research Institute and Hospital, National Cancer Center, Goyang, Korea
                [c ]Department of Nursing, Seoul Women’s College of Nursing, Seoul, Korea
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author: Hee-Su Lim, Department of Nursing, Seoul Women’s College of Nursing, Seoul, Korea, E-mail: ipshee@ 123456snjc.ac.kr
                Article
                ophrp-10-078
                10.24171/j.phrp.2019.10.2.06
                6481578
                adb2609e-46a2-4309-b659-69a2576ccaee
                Copyright ©2019, Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 15 January 2019
                : 16 March 2019
                : 19 March 2019
                Categories
                Original Article

                assertiveness,cotinine,nurse,policy,students,tobacco smoke pollution

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