At a glance
ClinicalIndex Comparison RecordStandardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.
Pediatrician Advice, Family Counseling & SHS Reduction for Underserved Children
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Clinic Quality Improvement + Behavioral Counseling and Clinic Quality Improvement + Attention Control for Second Hand Tobacco Smoke and Nicotine Dependence. Completed, enrolled 327 participants across 4 sites.
Detailed Summary
The study's primary aim is to test the hypothesis that an intervention integrating pediatric clinic-level quality improvement with home-level behavioral counseling (CQI+BC) will result in greater reductions in child cotinine (a biomarker of secondhand smoke exposure) and reported cigarettes exposed/day than a clinic-level quality improvement plus attention control intervention (CQI+A). A secondary aim is to test the hypothesis that relative to CQI+A, CQI+BC will result in higher cotinine-verified, 7-day point prevalence quit rate among parents.