Original articleEffects of passive smoking on respiratory illness from birth to age eighteen months, in Shanghai, People's Republic of China
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Cited by (37)
SmokeHaz: Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses of the Effects of Smoking on Respiratory Health
2016, ChestCitation Excerpt :One study114 also reported significantly more infants developed sleep apnea where both parents had smoked during pregnancy compared with only mothers smoking during pregnancy (P = .007). Thirty-four studies118-151 assessing the effect of passive smoking on the risk of LRTI in children < 2 years of age were identified from a previous review152 and an updated search. Eighteen studies considered the effects of any household member smoking: six of both parents smoking, nine of paternal smoking, 16 of maternal smoking, and 11 of prenatal maternal smoking (some studies covered more than one exposure).
Bacterial Pneumonia, Lung Abscess, and Empyema
2008, Pediatric Respiratory MedicineBenefits and Risks of Breastfeeding
2007, Advances in PediatricsCitation Excerpt :Although children of mothers who smoked and breastfed did not experience the expected cognitive deficits seen in children of mothers who did not breastfeed but smoked, passive exposure to cigarette smoke should be avoided because it increases the risk for respiratory illness in infants and children [133], passive exposure to cigarette smoke increases the risk for respiratory illness in infants and children [134]. This risk is reduced if the child is breastfed [135]. Mothers who cannot stop smoking should be advised to breastfeed and to exercise extreme caution to avoid passive smoke exposure to their offspring.
Parental smoking: Asthma and wheezing illnesses in infants and children
2001, Paediatric Respiratory ReviewsBacterial pneumonia in children
1998, Seminars in Pediatric Infectious Diseases