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A protocol for measuring the impact of a smoke-free housing policy on indoor tobacco smoke exposure.

Rodrigo Arce CardozoAlexis FeinbergAlbert TovarM J Ruzmyn VilcassimDonna ShelleyBrian ElbelSue KaplanKatarzyna WykaAna M RuleTerry GordonLorna E Thorpe
Published in: BMC public health (2019)
The baseline survey was completed by 559 NYCHA residents and 471 comparison building residents (response rates, 35, and 32%, respectively). Smoking prevalence was comparable between study arms (15.7% among NYCHA residents and 15.2% among comparison residents). The majority of residents reported supporting a building-wide smoke-free policy (63.0 and 59.9%, respectively). We enrolled 157 NYCHA and 118 comparison non-smoking households into the longitudinal air monitoring study and performed air monitoring in common areas. Follow up surveys and air monitoring in participant households occur every 6 months for 2.5 years. Capitalizing on the opportunity of this federal policy rollout, the large and diverse public housing population in NYC, and robust municipal data sources, this study offers a unique opportunity to evaluate the policy's direct impacts on SHS exposure. Methods in this protocol can inform similar SFH policy evaluations elsewhere.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • mental health
  • randomized controlled trial
  • cross sectional
  • emergency department
  • mental illness
  • air pollution
  • big data
  • health risk
  • electronic health record