National Academy of Sciences | 150 Year Anniversary

Questions? Call 800-624-6242

| Items in cart [0]

The National Academies Press

HARDBACK
price:$49.95
add to cart

Rights & Permissions

topleft topright

Ending the Tobacco Problem: A Blueprint for the Nation (2007)
Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice (BPH)

Citation Manager

. "Appendix G Reducing and Preventing Tobacco Use Among Pregnant Women, Parents, and Families." Ending the Tobacco Problem: A Blueprint for the Nation. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2007.

Please select a format:

BibTeX EndNote RefMan


Page
515
bottomleft bottomright

The following HTML text is provided to enhance online readability. Many aspects of typography translate only awkwardly to HTML. Please use the page image as the authoritative form to ensure accuracy.


Ending the Tobacco Problem: A Blueprint for the Nation

Mullen, PD, DiClemente, CC, Bartholomew, LK. 2000. Theory and context and Project PANDA: A program to help postpartum women stay off cigaretes. Designing Theory and Evidence-Based Health Promotion Programs. Mountain View, CA:Mayfield Publishers. Pp. 453-477.

Mullen PD, Richardson MA, Quinn VP, Ershoff DH. 1997. Post-partum return to smoking: who is at risk and when. American Journal of Health Promotion 11:323-330.

O’Byrne KK, Haddock CK, Poston WSC, Mid America Heart Institute. 2002. Parenting style and adolescent smoking. Journal of Adolescent Health 30:418-425.

Okah FA, Choi WS, Okuyemi KS, Ahluwalia JS. 2002. Effect of children on home smoking restriction by inner-city smokers. Pediatrics 109:244-249.

Orleans CT, Barker DC, Kaufman NJ, Marx JF. Helping pregnant smokers quit: meeting the challenge in the next decade. Tobacco Control 9:6-11.

Owen L, McNeill A. 2001. Saliva cotinine as indicator of cigarette smoking in pregnant women. Addiction 96:1001-1006.

Paarlberg KM, Vingerhoets JJM, Passchier J, Heinen AGJJ, Dekker GA, Van Geijn HP. 1999. Smoking status in pregnancy is associated with daily stressors and low well-being. Psychology Health 14:87-96.

Panjari M, Bell RJ, Astbury J, Bishop SM, Dalais F, Rice GE. 1997. Women who spontaneously quite smoking in early pregnancy. Ausralian andt New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaeocology 37:271-278.

Pbert L, Ockene JK, Zapka J, Ma Y, Goins KV, Oncken C, Stoddard AM. 2004. A community health center smoking-cessation intervention for pregnant and postpartum women. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 26:377-385.

Perry CL, Pirie P, Holder W, Halper A, Dudovitz B. 1990. Parent involvement in cigarette smoking prevention: two pilot evaluations of the “Unpuffables Program.” Journal of School Health 60:443-447.

Pickett KE, Wakschlag LS, Dai L, Leventhal BL. 2003. Fluctuations of maternal smoking during pregnancy. Obstetrics and Gynecology 101:140-147.

Pizacani BA, Martin DP, Stark MJ, Koepsell TD, Thompson B, Diehr, P. 2002. Household smoking bans: which households have them and do they work? Preventive Medicine 36:99-107.

Prochaska JA, DiClemente CC, Norcross JC. 1992. In search of how people change: applications to addictive behaviors. American Psychologist 47:1102-1114.

Quinn VP, Mullen, PD, Ershoff DH. 1991. Women who stop smoking spontaneously prior to prenatal care and predictors of relapse before delivery. Addictive Behaviors 6:153-160.

Simons-Morton B, Chen R, Abroms L, Haynie DL. 2004. Latent growth curve analyses of peer and parent influences on smoking progression among early adolescents. Health Psychology 23:612-621.

Slotkin TA. The impact of fetal nicotine exposure on nervous system development and its role in sudden infant death syndrome. Nicotine Safety and Toxicity. New York: Oxford University Press. Pp. 89-97.

Slomkowski C, Rende R, Novak S, Lloyd-Richardson E, Niaura R. 2005. Sibling effects on smoking in adolescence: evidence for social influence from a genetically informative design. Addiction 100:430-438.

Stanton B, Cole M, Galbraith J, Li X, Pendleton S, Cottrel L, Marshall S, Wu Y, Kaljee L. Randomized trial of a parent intervention: parents can make a difference in long-term adolescent risk behaviors, perceptions, and knowledge. Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine 158:947-955.

Stattin H, Kerr M. 2000. Parental monitoring: a reinterpretation. Child Development 71:1072-1085.

Steinberg L, Fletcher A, Darling N. 1994. Parental monitoring and peer influences on adolescent substance use. Pediatrics 93:1060-1064.

Tilson EC, McBride CM, Lipkus IM, Catalano RF. 2004. Testing the interaction between parent-child relationship factors and parent smoking to predict youth smoking. Journal of Adolescent Health 35:182-189.

Ventura, SJ, Martin, JA, Curtin, SC, Mathews, TJ, Park, MM. 2000. Births: Final data for 1998. National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol 48, No 3. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics.

Walsh RA, Redman S, Adamson L. 1996. The accuracy of self-report of smoking status in pregnant women. Addictive Behaviors 21:675-679.

Wisborg K, Henriksen TB, Obel C, Skajaa E. 1999. Smoking during pregnancy and hospitalization of the child. Pediatrics 104:e46.

Yu SM, Park CH, Schwalberg RH. 2002. Factors associated with smoking cessation among U.S. pregnant women. Maternal and Child Health Journal 6:89-97.

Page
515
Front Matter (R1-R16)
Summary (1-28)
Introduction (29-38)
PART I BACKGROUND, 1 Epidemiology of Tobacco Use: History and Current Trends (39-76)
2 Factors Perpetuating the Tobacco Problem (77-106)
3 Containing the Tobacco Problem (107-142)
PART II A BLUEPRINT FOR REDUCING TOBACCO USE, 4 Reducing Tobacco Use: A Policy Framework (143-156)
5 Strengthening Traditional Tobacco Control Measures (157-270)
6 Changing the Regulatory Landscape (271-340)
7 New Frontiers of Tobacco Control (341-354)
Index (355-372)
Appendix A Comprehensive Smoking Cessation Policy for All Smokers: Systems Integration to Save Lives and Money (373-422)
Appendix B Clean Air Laws (423-434)
Appendix C Warning Labels and Packaging (435-448)
Appendix D The Long-Term Promise of Effective School-Based Smoking Prevention Programs (449-477)
Appendix E Adolescents' and Young Adults' Perceptions of Tobacco Use: A Review and Critique of the Current Literature (478-494)
Appendix F Interventions for Children and Youth in the Health Care Setting (495-502)
Appendix G Reducing and Preventing Tobacco Use Among Pregnant Women, Parents, and Families (503-515)
Appendix H Smoking in the Movies: Its Impact on Youth and Youth Smoking (516-551)
Appendix I State Statutes Governing Direct Shipment of Alcoholic Beverages to Consumers: Precedents for Regulating Tobacco Retail Shipments (552-577)
Appendix J The Role of Public Policies in Reducing Smoking Prevalence: Results from the SimSmoke Tobacco Policy Simulation Model (578-598)
Appendix K Commissioned Simulation Modeling of Smoking Prevalence as an Outcome of Selected Tobacco Control Measures (599-640)
Appendix L Controlling the Retail Sales Environment: Access, Advertising, and Promotional Activities (641-652)
Appendix M Sales and Marketing of Cigarettes on the Internet: Emerging Threats to Tobacco Control and Promising Policy Solutions (653-678)
Appendix N Media Campaigns and Tobacco Control (679-689)
Appendix O Advocacy as a Tobacco Control Strategy (690-703)
Appendix P Special Populations with Higher Rates of Cigarette Smoking: Identification and Implications for Tobacco Control (704-716)