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The dissemination of smoking cessation methods for pregnant women: Achieving the Year 2000 Objectives

R.A. Windsor, Chang Qing Li, J.B. Lowe, L.L. Perkins, D. Ershoff and T. Glynn

American Journal of Public Health, 1993, vol. 83, issue 2, 173-178

Abstract: The smoking prevalence rate among adult women and pregnant women has decreased only 0.3 to 0.5% per year since 1969. Without a nationwide dissemination of efficacious smoking cessation methods based on these trends, by the year 2000 the smoking prevalence among pregnant women will be approximately 18%. This estimate is well above the US Department of Health and Human Services Year 2000 Objective of 10%. The US dissemination of tested smoking cessation methods could help an additional 12 900 to 155 000 pregnant smokers annually and 600 000 to 1 481 000 cumulatively to quit smoking during the 1990s. Dissemination could help achieve 31 to 78% of the Year 2000 Objectives for pregnancy smoking prevalence. (With dissemination, at best a 15% smoking prevalence during pregnancy, rather than the 10% objective, is likely to be observed.) Our results confirm a well-documented need for a national campaign to disseminate smoking cessation methods.

Date: 1993
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