10 results on '"Northrup, Thomas F."'
Search Results
2. Handwashing Results in Incomplete Nicotine Removal from Fingers of Individuals who Smoke: A Randomized Controlled Experiment.
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Northrup, Thomas F., Stotts, Angela L., Suchting, Robert, Khan, Amir M., Klawans, Michelle R., Green, Charles, Hoh, Eunha, Hovell, Melbourne F., Matt, Georg E., and Quintana, Penelope J. E.
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IRRIGATION (Medicine) , *VISITING the sick , *FINGERS , *NEONATAL intensive care , *CARBON monoxide , *INFANT care , *CROSS-sectional method , *NICOTINE , *NEONATAL intensive care units , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *INTERVIEWING , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *RISK assessment , *PASSIVE smoking , *HAND washing , *SMOKING , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PATIENT safety - Abstract
Objective Tobacco residue, also known as third-hand smoke (THS), contains toxicants and lingers in dust and on surfaces and clothes. THS also remains on hands of individuals who smoke, with potential transfer to infants during visitation while infants are hospitalized in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs), raising concerns (e.g., hindered respiratory development) for vulnerable infants. Previously unexplored, this study tested handwashing (HW) and sanitization efficacy for finger-nicotine removal in a sample of adults who smoked and were visiting infants in an NICU. Study Design A cross-sectional sample was recruited to complete an interview, carbon monoxide breath samples, and three nicotine wipes of separate fingers (thumb, index, and middle). Eligible participants (n = 14) reported current smoking (verified with breath samples) and were randomly assigned to 30 seconds of HW (n = 7) or alcohol-based sanitization (n = 7), with the order of finger wipes both counterbalanced and randomly assigned. After randomization, the first finger was wiped for nicotine. Participants then washed or sanitized their hands and finger two was wiped 5 minutes later. An interview assessing tobacco/nicotine use and exposure was then administered, followed by a second breath sample and the final finger wipe (40–60 minutes after washing/sanitizing). Results Generalized linear mixed models found that HW was more effective than sanitizer for nicotine removal but failed to completely remove nicotine. Conclusions Without proper protections (e.g., wearing gloves and gowns), NICU visitors who smoke may inadvertently expose infants to THS. Research on cleaning protocols are needed to protect vulnerable medical populations from THS and associated risks. Key Points NICU infants may be exposed to THS via visitors. THS is not eliminated by HW or sanitizing. THS removal protections for NICU infants are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Thirdhand Smoke Contamination and Infant Nicotine Exposure in a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: An Observational Study.
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Northrup, Thomas F, Stotts, Angela L, Suchting, Robert, Khan, Amir M, Green, Charles, Klawans, Michelle R, Quintana, Penelope J E, Hoh, Eunha, Hovell, Melbourne F, and Matt, Georg E
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NEONATAL intensive care , *INTENSIVE care units , *NICOTINE , *CURRICULUM , *INFANTS - Abstract
Introduction: Thirdhand smoke (THS) is ultrafine particulate matter and residue resulting from tobacco combustion, with implications for health-related harm (eg, impaired wound healing), particularly among hospitalized infants. Project aims were to characterize nicotine (THS proxy) transported on neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) visitors and deposited on bedside furniture, as well as infant exposure.Methods: Cross-sectional data were collected from participants in a metropolitan NICU. Participants completed a survey and carbon monoxide breath sample, and 41.9% (n = 88) of participants (n = 210) were randomly selected for finger-nicotine wipes during a study phase when all bedside visitors were screened for nicotine use and finger-nicotine levels. During an overlapping study phase, 80 mother-infant dyads consented to bedside furniture-nicotine wipes and an infant urine sample (for cotinine analyses).Results: Most nonstaff visitors' fingers had nicotine above the limit of quantification (>LOQ; 61.9%). Almost all bedside furniture surfaces (93.8%) and infant cotinine measures (93.6%) had values >LOQ, regardless of household nicotine use. Participants who reported using (or lived with others who used) nicotine had greater furniture-nicotine contamination (Mdn = 0.6 [interquartile range, IQR = 0.2-1.6] µg/m2) and higher infant cotinine (Mdn = 0.09 [IQR = 0.04-0.25] ng/mL) compared to participants who reported no household-member nicotine use (Mdn = 0.5 [IQR = 0.2-0.7] µg/m2; Mdn = 0.04 [IQR = 0.03-0.07] ng/mL, respectively). Bayesian univariate regressions supported hypotheses that increased nicotine use/exposure correlated with greater nicotine contamination (on fingers/furniture) and infant THS exposure.Conclusions: Potential furniture-contamination pathways and infant-exposure routes (eg, dermal) during NICU hospitalization were identified, despite hospital prohibitions on tobacco/nicotine use. This work highlights the surreptitious spread of nicotine and potential THS-related health risks to vulnerable infants during critical stages of development.Implications: THS contamination is underexplored in medical settings. Infants who were cared for in the NICU are vulnerable to health risks from THS exposure. This study demonstrated that 62% of nonstaff NICU visitors transport nicotine on their fingers to the NICU. Over 90% of NICU (bedside) furniture was contaminated with nicotine, regardless of visitors' reported household-member nicotine use or nonuse. Over 90% of infants had detectable levels of urinary cotinine during NICU hospitalizations. Results justify further research to better protect infants from unintended THS exposure while hospitalized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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4. Medical staff contributions to thirdhand smoke contamination in a neonatal intensive care unit.
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Northrup, Thomas F., Stotts, Angela L., Suchting, Robert, Khan, Amir M., Green, Charles, Quintana, Penelope J. E., Hoh, Eunha, Hovell, Melbourne F., and Matt, Georg E.
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CHRONIC diseases in children , *FAMILIES , *FINGERS , *FRIENDSHIP , *HOSPITAL medical staff , *NEONATAL intensive care , *NICOTINE , *PASSIVE smoking , *PATIENT safety , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SMOKING , *HOME environment , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *NEONATAL intensive care units , *ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Non-smoking policies are strictly enforced in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs), which may still become contaminated by thirdhand smoke (THS), posing potential health risks to medically fragile infants. Study aims were to explore contamination routes by characterizing nicotine levels (THS proxy) found on the fingers of NICU medical staff and to assess finger-nicotine correlates. METHODS NICU medical staff were surveyed regarding smoking and electronic nicotine devices (ENDS) use/exposure, and household characteristics. Approximately 35% of staff were randomly selected for a finger-nicotine wipe. Three separate quantile regressions modeled percentiles associated with: presence of any finger nicotine, fingernicotine levels above the median field blank level (i.e. 0.377 ng/wipe), and finger-nicotine levels two times the median blank. RESULTS The final sample size was 246 (n=260 approached; n=14 refusals). Over three-quarters (78.5%) reported some exposure to tobacco smoke or ENDS vapor/aerosols. After field-blank adjustments, the median nicotine level (ng/finger wipe) was 0.232 (IQR: 0.021--0.681) and 78.3% of medical staff had measurable finger-nicotine levels. Both being near smoking in friends'/family members' homes and finger-surface area were related to elevated finger-nicotine levels (p<0.05) in the median blank model. CONCLUSIONS Almost four in five NICU staff had measurable finger nicotine, with finger surface area and frequency of reported exposure to tobacco smoke in friends'/family members' homes emerging as important correlates. Future research will determine the impact of THS on NICU infants. Medical personnel working in a NICU should be cognizant of secondhand smoke and THS, particularly inside friends'/family members' homes, to reduce potential NICU contamination and infant exposures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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5. Thirdhand smoke contamination in hospital settings: assessing exposure risk for vulnerable paediatric patients.
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Northrup, Thomas F., Khan, Amir M., Jacob III, Peyton, Benowitz, Neal L., Eunha Hoh, Hovell, Melbourne F., Matt, Georg E., and Stotts, Angela L.
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RISK factors of environmental exposure ,HOSPITAL care of children ,NEONATAL intensive care ,NICOTINE ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,VISITING the sick ,DATA analysis ,NEONATAL intensive care units ,COTININE ,DATA analysis software ,ADVERSE health care events ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHILDREN ,FETUS - Published
- 2016
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6. Thirdhand Smoke in the Homes of Medically Fragile Children: Assessing the Impact of Indoor Smoking Levels and Smoking Bans.
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Northrup, Thomas F., Matt, Georg E., Hovell, Melbourne F., Khan, Amir M., and Stotts, Angela L.
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SMOKING , *CIGARETTE smokers , *SMOKING policy , *PASSIVE smoking , *CARCINOGENS , *INDOOR air pollution laws , *PASSIVE smoking -- Law & legislation , *SMOKING laws , *SMOKING prevention , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FAMILIES , *INDOOR air pollution , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *NEONATAL intensive care , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *SMOKING cessation , *EVALUATION research , *NEONATAL intensive care units - Abstract
Introduction: Thirdhand smoke (THS) residue results from secondhand smoke, and is emerging as a distinct public health hazard, particularly for medically fragile pediatric patients living with smokers. THS is difficult to remove and readily reacts with other pollutants to form carcinogens and ultrafine particles. This study investigated THS found in homes of high-risk infants admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit and their association with characteristics (eg, number of household smokers) hypothesized to influence THS.Methods: Baseline data from 141 hospitalized infants' homes were analyzed, along with follow-up data (n = 22) to explore household smoking characteristics and THS changes in response to indoor smoking ban policies.Results: Households with an indoor ban, in which not more than 10 cigarettes/d were smoked, had the lowest levels of THS contamination compared to homes with no ban (P < .001) and compared to homes with an indoor ban in which greater numbers of cigarettes were smoked (P < .001). Importantly, homes with an indoor ban in which at least 11 cigarettes/d were smoked were not different from homes without a ban. The follow-up sample of 22 homes provided initial evidence indicating that, unless a ban was implemented, THS levels in homes continued to increase over time.Conclusions: Preliminary longitudinal data suggest that THS may continue to accumulate in homes over time and household smoking bans may be protective. However, for homes with high occupant smoking levels, banning indoor smoking may not be fully adequate to protect children from THS. Unless smoking is reduced and bans are implemented, medically fragile children will be exposed to the dangers of THS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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7. Characteristics associated with intervention and follow-up attendance in a secondhand smoke exposure study for families of NICU infants.
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Northrup, Thomas F., Green, Charles, Evans, Patricia W., and Stotts, Angela L.
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PASSIVE smoking , *NEONATAL intensive care , *REPENTANCE , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *CIGARETTE smokers - Abstract
Objective: The neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is an ideal setting to intervene with an under served population on secondhand smoke exposure (SHSe). Unfortunately, attrition may compromise outcomes. Baseline characteristics associated with intervention and follow-up attendance were investigated in mothers who participated in a novel SHSe prevention study designed for households with a smoker and a NICU-admitted infant. Methods: Intervention participants received two motivational, NICU-based counseling sessions; usual care participants received pamphlets. Home-based follow-up assessments occurred at 1, 3 and 6 months. Sociodemographic, smoking history, and psychosocial factors were analyzed. Results: Mothers from households with greater numbers of cigarettes smoked and fewer children had higher odds of both intervention and follow-up attendance. Maternal smoking abstinence (lifetime), more adults in the home and higher perceived interpersonal support were also associated with higher odds of follow-up visit completion. Conclusions: Innovative strategies are needed to engage mothers in secondhand smoke interventions, especially mothers who smoke, have lower levels of social support and have greater childcare responsibilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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8. Breastfeeding practices in mothers of high-respiratory-risk NICU infants: impact of depressive symptoms and smoking.
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Northrup, Thomas F., Wootton, Susan H., Evans, Patricia W., and Stotts, Angela L.
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NEONATAL intensive care , *INTENSIVE care units , *BREASTFEEDING , *MOTHERS , *ARTIFICIAL respiration , *DEPRESSION in women , *BIRTH weight , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Aim: Mothers of infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) have very low breastfeeding rates and these high-respiratory-risk (HRR) NICU infants may benefit from breastfeeding through decreased risk for respiratory illnesses. This population's increased risk for maternal depression and high rates (22%) of maternal smoking may negatively affect breastfeeding. Objective: This exploratory study investigated associations of breastfeeding with depressive symptoms and maternal smoking in mothers of HRR NICU infants (i.e. presence of one household smoker and birth weight <1500 g or mechanical ventilation ≥12 h). Methods: Breastfeeding, depression and smoking data were collected from 104 mothers in the NICU following delivery. Results: Fifty-five (52.9%) mothers reported breastfeeding, 39 (37.5%) had a Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) score (≥16) suggestive of depression, and 36 (34.6%) reported smoking. Mothers with CES-D scores ≥16 were less likely to breastfeed compared to those with scores <16 (38.5% versus 61.5%; p = 0.02). Breastfeeding and smoking were not significantly associated ( p < 0.10). Mothers of HRR infants with significant depressive symptoms who smoke have significantly lower breastfeeding rates (21%) than mothers who are not depressed and do not smoke (65%). Conclusions: Interventions to improve breastfeeding initiation and continuation that target depression and smoking are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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9. Secondhand smoke risk in infants discharged from an NICU: potential for significant health disparities?
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Stotts, Angela L., Evans, Patricia W., Green, Charles E., Northrup, Thomas F., Dodrill, Carrie L., Fox, Jeffery M., Tyson, Jon E., and Hovell, Melbourne F.
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PASSIVE smoking in infants ,NEONATAL intensive care ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,INTENSIVE care units ,HEALTH equity ,RESPIRATORY infections ,MEDICAL statistics ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Introduction: Secondhand smoke exposure (SHSe) threatens fragile infants discharged from a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Smoking practices were examined in families with a high respiratory risk infant (born at very low birth weight; ventilated > 12 hr) in a Houston, Texas, NICU. Socioeconomic status, race, and mental health status were hypothesized to be related to SHSe and household smoking bans.Methods: Data were collected as part of The Baby's Breath Project, a hospital-based SHSe intervention trial targeting parents with a high-risk infant in the NICU who reported a smoker in the household (N = 99). Measures of sociodemographics, smoking, home and car smoking bans, and depression were collected.Results: Overall, 26% of all families with a high-risk infant in the NICU reported a household smoker. Almost half of the families with a smoker reported an annual income of less than $25,000. 46.2% of families reported having a total smoking ban in place in both their homes and cars. Only 27.8% families earning less than $25,000 reported having a total smoking ban in place relative to almost 60% of families earning more (p < .01). African American and Caucasian families were less likely to have a smoking ban compared with Hispanics (p < .05). Mothers who reported no smoking ban were more depressed than those who had a household smoking ban (p < .02).Conclusions: The most disadvantaged families were least likely to have protective health behaviors in place to reduce SHSe and, consequently, are most at-risk for tobacco exposure and subsequent tobacco-related health disparities. Innovative SHSe interventions for this vulnerable population are sorely needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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10. Thirdhand smoke associations with the gut microbiomes of infants admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit: An observational study.
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Northrup, Thomas F., Stotts, Angela L., Suchting, Robert, Matt, Georg E., Quintana, Penelope J.E., Khan, Amir M., Green, Charles, Klawans, Michelle R., Johnson, Mary, Benowitz, Neal, Jacob, Peyton, Hoh, Eunha, Hovell, Melbourne F., and Stewart, Christopher J.
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NEONATAL intensive care , *INTENSIVE care units , *INFANTS , *SMOKE , *CURRICULUM , *ADULTS - Abstract
Microbiome differences have been found in adults who smoke cigarettes compared to non-smoking adults, but the impact of thirdhand smoke (THS ; post-combustion tobacco residue) on hospitalized infants' rapidly developing gut microbiomes is unexplored. Our aim was to explore gut microbiome differences in infants admitted to a neonatal ICU (NICU) with varying THS-related exposure. Forty-three mother-infant dyads (household member[s] smoke cigarettes, n = 32; no household smoking, n = 11) consented to a carbon monoxide-breath sample, bedside furniture nicotine wipes, infant-urine samples (for cotinine [nicotine's primary metabolite] assays), and stool collection (for 16S rRNA V4 gene sequencing). Negative binomial regression modeled relative abundances of 8 bacterial genera with THS exposure-related variables (i.e., household cigarette use, surface nicotine, and infant urine cotinine), controlling for gestational age, postnatal age, antibiotic use, and breastmilk feeding. Microbiome-diversity outcomes were modeled similarly. Bayesian posterior probabilities (PP) ≥75.0% were considered meaningful. A majority of infants (78%) were born pre-term. Infants from non-smoking homes and/or with lower NICU-furniture surface nicotine had greater microbiome alpha-diversity compared to infants from smoking households (PP ≥ 75.0%). Associations (with PP ≥ 75.0%) of selected bacterial genera with urine cotinine, surface nicotine, and/or household cigarette use were evidenced for 7 (of 8) modeled genera. For example, lower Bifidobacterium relative abundance associated with greater furniture nicotine (IRR<0.01 [<0.01, 64.02]; PP = 87.1%), urine cotinine (IRR = 0.08 [<0.01,2.84]; PP = 86.9%), and household smoking (IRR<0.01 [<0.01, 7.38]; PP = 96.0%; FDR p < 0.05). THS-related exposure was associated with microbiome differences in NICU-admitted infants. Additional research on effects of tobacco-related exposures on healthy infant gut-microbiome development is warranted. • Urine cotinine, surface nicotine, and home smoking measured THS-related exposure. • NICU infants' gut microbiome differences were associated with THS-related exposure. • Higher THS-related exposure was associated with less alpha diversity. • Higher THS-related exposure was associated with 7 of 8 bacterial genera variations. • A tobacco-specific carcinogen was detected in human breastmilk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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