Abstract
In a British population cigarette smoking during pregnancy increased the late fetal plus neonatal mortality rate by 28% and reduced birth weight by 170 g, and these differences persist even after allowing for a number of “mediating” maternal and social variables. A change in smoking habit by the end of the fourth month of pregnancy places a mother in the risk category appropriate to her changed habit. This evidence should have important implications for health education aimed at getting pregnant mothers to give up smoking. © 1972, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Butler, N. R., Ross, E. M., & Goldstein, H. (1972). Cigarette Smoking in Pregnancy: Its Influence on Birth Weight and Perinatal Mortality. British Medical Journal, 2(5806), 127–130. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.5806.127
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