Unbound MEDLINE

Assessment of exposure to secondhand smoke at outdoor bars and family restaurants in athens, georgia, using salivary cotinine. Journal of occupational and environmental hygiene [J Occup Environ Hyg] Journal article

 
TitleAssessment of exposure to secondhand smoke at outdoor bars and family restaurants in athens, georgia, using salivary cotinine.
Author(s)Hall JC, Bernert JT, Hall DB, St Helen G, Kudon LH, Naeher LP 
InstitutionDepartment of Environmental Health Sciences, The University of Georgia, College of Public Health, Athens, Georgia.
SourceJ Occup Environ Hyg 2009 Nov; 6(11):698-704.
AbstractExposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) in outdoor settings is a growing public health concern due to recent indoor smoking bans. The objective of this study was to measure salivary cotinine, a metabolite of nicotine, in subjects aged 21-30 exposed to SHS outside bars and restaurants in Athens, Georgia. Nonsmokers participated during 6-hr periods in outdoor standing or seating areas of bars and restaurants where indoor smoking was banned, as well as a control outdoor location with no smokers over six weekends during the summer and early fall of 2007. Pre- and post-exposure saliva samples (N = 25 person-days at the bar site, N = 28 person-days at the restaurant site, and N = 11 person-days at the control) were collected and analyzed for cotinine. The mean change in the response, (ln(post) - ln(pre)) salivary cotinine levels, was significantly impacted by the type of site (bar, restaurant, control) (F = 5.09; d.f. = 2, 6.7; p = 0.0455). The median percent increase in salivary cotinine from pre-test to post-test was estimated to be 162%, 102%, and 16% at the bar, restaurant, and control sites, respectively, values that were significant increases at bars (t = 4.63; d.f. = 9.24; p = 0.0011) and restaurants (t = 4.33; d.f. = 4.47; p = 0.0097) but not at the control sites. On average, these pre-test to post-test increases in salivary cotinine were significantly higher at bar sites than control sites (t = 3.05; d.f. = 9.85; p = 0.0176) and at restaurant sites compared with control sites (t = 2.35; d.f. = 5.09; p = 0.0461). Nonsmokers outside restaurants and bars in Athens, Georgia, have significantly elevated salivary cotinine levels indicative of secondhand smoke exposure.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
PubMed ID19757294
  
Advertise on this site.