Burden of respiratory disease attributable to secondhand smoke exposure at home in children in Spain (2015)

TitleBurden of respiratory disease attributable to secondhand smoke exposure at home in children in Spain (2015)
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsContinente X, Arechavala T, Fernàndez E, Pérez-Ríos M, Schiaffino A, Soriano JB, Carreras G, López-Nicolás Á, Gorini G, López MJosé
JournalPreventive Medicine
Volume123
Pagination34-40
Date Published2019/06/01/
ISBN Number0091-7435
Accession NumberWOS:000468336900006
KeywordsChild, Hospitalization, Morbidity, Respiratory tract diseases, Tobacco smoke pollution
Abstract

This study aimed to estimate the number of incident cases and hospital admissions attributable to secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure at home for asthma, otitis media (OM), and lower respiratory infections (LRI) in children in Spain. The burden of respiratory disease caused by SHS exposure was estimated in terms of incident cases and hospitalized cases for asthma, OM, and LRI. Estimates were calculated using the population attributable fraction. The age-specific (0-1 year, 0-4 years, 5-11 years, and 0-11 years) prevalence of SHS exposure in children was estimated through a telephone survey performed in a representative sample of Spanish households with children in 2016. The risk estimates for all diseases were selected from international meta-analyses. The number of hospitalized cases was obtained for each disease from the Hospital Minimum Data Set provided by the Ministry of Health of Spain. Incident cases were obtained from the Global Health Data Exchange. In 2015, SHS exposure caused an estimated total of 136,403 incident cases of the following respiratory diseases: 9058 (8.5%) cases of asthma, 120,248 (8.5%) of OM, and 7097 (13.5%) of LRI in children aged 0–14 years old in Spain. Likewise, SHS exposure caused a total of 3028 hospitalized cases, with 379 (8.5%) for asthma and 167 (8.5%) for OM in children 0–11 years old, and 2482 (11.6%) for LRI in children <2 years old. The high burden of respiratory disease attributed to SHS exposure supports the need to improve protection of children against SHS exposure by extending smoke-free regulations to homes and cars.

DOI10.1016/j.ypmed.2019.02.028
Link

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0091743519300672