Saliva cotinine concentrations in 569 non-smoking schoolchildren were strongly related to the smoking habits of their parents. When neither parent smoked the mean concentration was 0.44 ng/ml, rising to 3.38 ng/ml when both parents were cigarette smokers. Mothers’ smoking had a stronger influence than did fathers’ (p0.01). In addition, there was a small independent effect of number of siblings who smoked (p 0.01). The dose of nicotine received from fathers’ smoking was estimated as equivalent to the active smoking of 30 cigarettes a year, that from mothers’ smoking as equivalent to smoking 50 cigarettes a year, and that from both parents smoking as equivalent to smoking 80 cigarettes a year. This unsolicited burden may be prolonged throughout childhood and poses a definite risk to phealth. © 1985, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Tarvis, M. T., Russell, M. A. H., Feyerabend, C., Eiser, T., Morgan, M., Gammage, P., & Gray, E. M. (1985). Passive exposure to tobacco smoke: Saliva cotinine concentrations in a representative population sample of non-smoking schoolchildren. British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Ed.), 291(6500), 927–929. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.291.6500.927
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