Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ninho.inca.gov.br/jspui/handle/123456789/4722
Title: Smoke-free legislation and neonatal and infant mortality in Brazil: longitudinal quasiexperimental study
Other Titles: v. 29, n. 3, p. :312–319.
Authors: Hone, Thomas
Filippidis, Filippos T
Laverty, Anthony A
Sattamini, Isabela
Been, Jasper V
Vianna, Cristiane
Souza, Mirian de
Almeida, Liz Maria de
Millett, Christopher
Szklo, Andre Salem
Keywords: Ambientes Livres de Fumo
Smoke-Free Environments
Política Antifumo/legislação & jurisprudência
Smoke-Free Policy/legislation & jurisprudence
Morte do Lactente/etiologia
Infant Death/etiology
Brasil
Abandono do Hábito de Fumar
Smoking Cessation
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: Tob Control
Abstract: Objective: To examine the associations of partial and comprehensive smoke-free legislation with neonatal and infant mortality in Brazil using a quasi-experimental study design. Design: Monthly longitudinal (panel) ecological study from January 2000 to December 2016. Setting: All Brazilian municipalities (n=5565). Participants: Infant populations. Intervention: Smoke-free legislation in effect in each municipality and month. Legislation was encoded as basic (allowing smoking areas), partial (segregated smoking rooms) or comprehensive (no smoking in public buildings). Associations were quantified by immediate step and longer term slope/trend changes in outcomes. Statistical analyses: Municipal-level linear fixed-effects regression models. Main outcomes measures: Infant and neonatal mortality. Results: Implementation of partial smoke-free legislation was associated with a -3.3 % (95% CI -6.2% to -0.4%) step reduction in the municipal infant mortality rate, but no step change in neonatal mortality. Comprehensive smoke-free legislation implementation was associated with -5.2 % (95% CI -8.3% to -2.1%) and -3.4 % (95% CI -6.7% to -0.1%) step reductions in infant and neonatal mortality, respectively, and a -0.36 (95% CI -0.66 to-0.06) annual decline in the infant mortality rate. We estimated that had all smoke-free legislation introduced since 2004 been comprehensive, an additional 10 091 infant deaths (95% CI 1196 to 21 761) could have been averted. Conclusions: Strengthening smoke-free legislation in Brazil is associated with improvements in infant health outcomes-particularly under comprehensive legislation. Governments should accelerate implementation of comprehensive smoke-free legislation to protect infant health and achieve the United Nation's Sustainable Development Goal three.
URI: http://sr-vmlxaph03:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/4722
ISSN: 1468-3318
Appears in Collections:Artigos de Periódicos da área de Pesquisa Populacional



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