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Reduction in emergency department visits for children's asthma,ear infections,and respiratory infections after the introduction of state smoke-free legislation
Institution:1. Boston College, School of Social Work, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA;2. Boston College, Department of Economics, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA;3. Northeastern University School of Law, Public Health Advocacy Institute, 360 Huntington Avenue, Suite 117CU, Boston, MA 02115-5004, USA;4. Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftforschung (DIW Berlin), Department of Macroeconomics, Mohrenstraße 58, 10117 Berlin, Germany
Abstract:Despite the benefits of smoke-free legislation on adult health, little is known about its impact on children's health. We examined the effects of tobacco control policies on the rate of emergency department (ED) visits for childhood asthma (N = 128,807), ear infections (N = 288,697), and respiratory infections (N = 410,686) using outpatient ED visit data in Massachusetts (2001  2010), New Hampshire (2001–2009), and Vermont (2002  2010). We used negative binomial regression models to analyze the effect of state and local smoke-free legislation on ED visits for each health condition, controlling for cigarette taxes and health care reform legislation. We found no changes in the overall rate of ED visits for asthma, ear infections, and upper respiratory infections after the implementation of state or local smoke-free legislation or cigarette tax increases. However, an interaction with children's age revealed that among 10–17-year-olds state smoke-free legislation was associated with a 12% reduction in ED visits for asthma (adjusted incidence rate ratios (aIRR) 0.88; 95% CI 0.83, 0.95), an 8% reduction for ear infections (0.92; 0.88, 0.97), and a 9% reduction for upper respiratory infections (0.91; 0.87, 0.95). We found an overall 8% reduction in ED visits for lower respiratory infections after the implementation of state smoke-free legislation (0.92; 0.87, 0.96). The implementation of health care reform in Massachusetts was also associated with a 6–9% reduction in all children's ED visits for ear and upper respiratory infections. Our results suggest that state smoke-free legislation and health care reform may be effective interventions to improve children's health by reducing ED visits for asthma, ear infections, and respiratory infections.
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