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Validity of Self-Reported Tobacco Smoke Exposure among Non-Smoking Adult Public Housing Residents

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Fang, Shona C., Shan Chen, Felicia Trachtenberg, Slawa Rokicki, Gary Adamkiewicz, and Douglas E. Levy. 2016. “Validity of Self-Reported Tobacco Smoke Exposure among Non-Smoking Adult Public Housing Residents.” PLoS ONE 11 (5): e0155024. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0155024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155024.

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Abstract

Introduction: Tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) in public multi-unit housing (MUH) is of concern. However, the validity of self-reports for determining TSE among non-smoking residents in such housing is unclear. Methods: We analyzed data from 285 non-smoking public MUH residents living in non-smoking households in the Boston area. Participants were interviewed about personal TSE in various locations in the past 7 days and completed a diary of home TSE for 7 days. Self-reported TSE was validated against measurable saliva cotinine (lower limit of detection (LOD) 0.02 ng/ml) and airborne apartment nicotine (LOD 5 ng). Correlations, estimates of inter-measure agreement, and logistic regression assessed associations between self-reported TSE items and measurable cotinine and nicotine. Results: Cotinine and nicotine levels were low in this sample (median = 0.026 ng/ml and 0.022 μg/m3, respectively). Prevalence of detectable personal TSE was 66.3% via self-report and 57.0% via measurable cotinine (median concentration among those with cotinine>LOD: 0.057 ng/ml), with poor agreement (kappa = 0.06; sensitivity = 68.9%; specificity = 37.1%). TSE in the home, car, and other peoples’ homes was weakly associated with cotinine levels (Spearman correlations rs = 0.15–0.25), while TSE in public places was not associated with cotinine. Among those with airborne nicotine and daily diary data (n = 161), a smaller proportion had household TSE via self-report (41.6%) compared with measurable airborne nicotine (53.4%) (median concentration among those with nicotine>LOD: 0.04 μg/m3) (kappa = 0.09, sensitivity = 46.5%, specificity = 62.7%). Conclusions: Self-report alone was not adequate to identify individuals with TSE, as 31% with measurable cotinine and 53% with measurable nicotine did not report TSE. Self-report of TSE in private indoor spaces outside the home was most associated with measurable cotinine in this low-income non-smoking population.

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Biology and Life Sciences, Behavior, Habits, Smoking Habits, Anatomy, Body Fluids, Saliva, Medicine and Health Sciences, Physiology, Earth Sciences, Geography, Human Geography, Housing, Social Sciences, Political Science, Public Policy, Biochemistry, Biomarkers, Women's Health, Maternal Health, Pregnancy, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Health Care, Health Care Policy, People and Places, Population Groupings, Age Groups, Adults

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