Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data

Objectives: To report methods used to assemble a contemporary pregnancy cohort for investigating influences on smoking behaviour before, during and after pregnancy and to report characteristics of women recruited. Design: Longitudinal cohort survey. Setting: Two maternity hospitals, Nottingham...

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Main Authors: Orton, Sophie, Bowker, Katharine, Cooper, Sue, Naughton, Felix, Ussher, Michael, Pickett, Kate E., Leonardi-Bee, Jo, Sutton, Stephen, Dhalwani, Nafeesa N., Coleman, Tim
Format: Article
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2014
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28555/
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author Orton, Sophie
Bowker, Katharine
Cooper, Sue
Naughton, Felix
Ussher, Michael
Pickett, Kate E.
Leonardi-Bee, Jo
Sutton, Stephen
Dhalwani, Nafeesa N.
Coleman, Tim
author_facet Orton, Sophie
Bowker, Katharine
Cooper, Sue
Naughton, Felix
Ussher, Michael
Pickett, Kate E.
Leonardi-Bee, Jo
Sutton, Stephen
Dhalwani, Nafeesa N.
Coleman, Tim
author_sort Orton, Sophie
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Objectives: To report methods used to assemble a contemporary pregnancy cohort for investigating influences on smoking behaviour before, during and after pregnancy and to report characteristics of women recruited. Design: Longitudinal cohort survey. Setting: Two maternity hospitals, Nottingham, England. Participants: 3,265 women who attended antenatal ultrasound scan clinics were offered cohort enrolment; those who were 8-26 weeks pregnant and were currently smoking or had recently stopped smoking were eligible. Cohort enrolment took place between August 2011 and August 2012. Primary and secondary outcome measures: Prevalence of smoking at cohort entry and at two follow-up time points (34-36 weeks gestation and three months postnatally); response rate, participants’ sociodemographic characteristics. Results: 1101 (33.7%, 95% CI=32.1%–35.4%) women were eligible for inclusion in the cohort, and of these 850 (77.2%, 95% CI=74.6%-79.6%) were recruited. Within the cohort, 57.4% (N = 488, 95% CI=54.1%-60.7%) reported to be current smokers. Current smokers were significantly younger than ex-smokers (P < 0.05), more likely to have no formal qualifications and to not be in current paid employment compared to recent ex-smokers (P < 0.001). Conclusions: This contemporary cohort, which seeks very detailed information on smoking in pregnancy and its determinants, includes women with comparable sociodemographic characteristics to those in other UK cross sectional studies and cohorts. This suggests that future analyses using this cohort and aimed at understanding smoking behaviour in pregnancy may produce findings that are broadly generalisable.
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spelling nottingham-285552020-05-04T16:48:06Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28555/ Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data Orton, Sophie Bowker, Katharine Cooper, Sue Naughton, Felix Ussher, Michael Pickett, Kate E. Leonardi-Bee, Jo Sutton, Stephen Dhalwani, Nafeesa N. Coleman, Tim Objectives: To report methods used to assemble a contemporary pregnancy cohort for investigating influences on smoking behaviour before, during and after pregnancy and to report characteristics of women recruited. Design: Longitudinal cohort survey. Setting: Two maternity hospitals, Nottingham, England. Participants: 3,265 women who attended antenatal ultrasound scan clinics were offered cohort enrolment; those who were 8-26 weeks pregnant and were currently smoking or had recently stopped smoking were eligible. Cohort enrolment took place between August 2011 and August 2012. Primary and secondary outcome measures: Prevalence of smoking at cohort entry and at two follow-up time points (34-36 weeks gestation and three months postnatally); response rate, participants’ sociodemographic characteristics. Results: 1101 (33.7%, 95% CI=32.1%–35.4%) women were eligible for inclusion in the cohort, and of these 850 (77.2%, 95% CI=74.6%-79.6%) were recruited. Within the cohort, 57.4% (N = 488, 95% CI=54.1%-60.7%) reported to be current smokers. Current smokers were significantly younger than ex-smokers (P < 0.05), more likely to have no formal qualifications and to not be in current paid employment compared to recent ex-smokers (P < 0.001). Conclusions: This contemporary cohort, which seeks very detailed information on smoking in pregnancy and its determinants, includes women with comparable sociodemographic characteristics to those in other UK cross sectional studies and cohorts. This suggests that future analyses using this cohort and aimed at understanding smoking behaviour in pregnancy may produce findings that are broadly generalisable. BMJ Publishing Group 2014-05-14 Article PeerReviewed Orton, Sophie, Bowker, Katharine, Cooper, Sue, Naughton, Felix, Ussher, Michael, Pickett, Kate E., Leonardi-Bee, Jo, Sutton, Stephen, Dhalwani, Nafeesa N. and Coleman, Tim (2014) Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data. BMJ Open, 4 (5). pp. 1-10. ISSN 2044-6055 Smoking Tobacco Pregnancy Prenatal Smoking cessation Smoking in pregnancy http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/4/5/e004915.full?keytype=ref&ijkey=TYRvN1527OB9beX doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014-004915 doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014-004915
spellingShingle Smoking
Tobacco
Pregnancy
Prenatal
Smoking cessation
Smoking in pregnancy
Orton, Sophie
Bowker, Katharine
Cooper, Sue
Naughton, Felix
Ussher, Michael
Pickett, Kate E.
Leonardi-Bee, Jo
Sutton, Stephen
Dhalwani, Nafeesa N.
Coleman, Tim
Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data
title Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data
title_full Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data
title_fullStr Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data
title_short Longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data
title_sort longitudinal cohort survey of women's smoking behaviour and attitudes in pregnancy: study methods and baseline data
topic Smoking
Tobacco
Pregnancy
Prenatal
Smoking cessation
Smoking in pregnancy
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28555/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28555/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28555/