Keeping Kids Smokefree: rationale, design, and implementation of a community, school, and family-based intervention to modify behaviors related to smoking among Māori and Pacific Island children in New Zealand.

Marewa Glover, Robert Scragg, Vili Nosa, Chris Bullen, Judith McCool, Anette Kira
Author Information
  1. Marewa Glover: University of Auckland, New Zealand. m.glover@auckland.ac.nz

Abstract

Despite a concerted, sustained and comprehensive tobacco control effort, smoking is prevalent among young people in New Zealand, particularly for Māori and Pacific Island teenagers. Many took up smoking in their pre-teen years. New Zealand research has shown that daily smoking by children aged 14-15 years is strongly influenced by parental smoking. The Keeping Kids Smokefree study is investigating whether changing parental smoking behavior and attitudes via a community-partnership approach with parents, schools, and local health providers can reduce smoking initiation by 11-12 year olds. It is a quasi-experimental trial involving four schools in an urban area of high social deprivation with large numbers of Māori and Pacific Islands families. Schools were allocated to intervention or control and the intervention was developed through a process of engagement with the schools, parents of children and local healthcare organizations. This article describes the rationale, context, methodology and methods involved in establishing the study. Building Māori and Pacific Islander research capacity was a secondary objective of the study.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Attitude to Health
Case-Control Studies
Child
Female
Health Promotion
Humans
Male
New Zealand
Parents
School Health Services
Smoking Cessation

Word Cloud

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