Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 150, No. 1, 07 1994, 54-58.
Environmental tobacco smoke, low birth weight, and hospitalization for respiratory disease
Y Chen
Department of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada.
The author examined the effect of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke
(ETS) on hospitalization for respiratory illness in low-birth- weight (LBW,
less than 2,500 g) infants. This analysis was performed on the combined
data of 3,285 infants from the Jing-An and Chang-Ning epidemiologic studies
of children's health in Shanghai. Infants were classified into three ETS
groups according to the total number of cigarettes smoked daily by
household members: none, light (one to 19 cigarettes/d) and heavy (20+
cigarettes/d). There were no mothers who were smokers. Infants might have
been hospitalized more than once during their first 18 mo of life. Risk and
incidence density of hospitalization for respiratory disease increased with
increasing smoking by household members among the LBW infants more rapidly
than among the normal-birth-weight (NBW) infants. Compared with the NBW
infants who were living in nonsmoking households, the odds ratios for the
first episode of hospitalization for respiratory disease were 1.40 in the
NBW infants who were living in light smoking households and 1.61 in those
who were living in heavy smoking households. In the LBW infants, the odds
ratios were 2.91 and 4.48 in light and heavy smoking households
respectively, after adjustment for study area, sex, and feeding by simple
logistic regression analysis. Ordinal logistic regression analysis for all
episodes of respiratory hospitalization showed similar results.
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Copyright © 1994 American Thoracic Society
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