2014
DOI: 10.1111/1753-6405.12213
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Linking birth records to hospital admission records enhances the identification of women who smoke during pregnancy

Abstract: Objective: Birth records and hospital admission records are valuable for research on maternal smoking, but individually are known to under-estimate smokers. This study investigated the extent to which combining data from these records enhances the identification of pregnant smokers, and whether this affects research findings such as estimates of maternal smoking prevalence and risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes associated with smoking. Methods:A total of 846,039 birth records in New South Wales, Australia, (20… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…The proportion of women who started smoking during the second pregnancy (3.6%) was lower than those being reported in US studies (4.8–6.2%) but higher than the finding from a Norwegian study (2.3%) . It is an encouraging finding that the trend in quitting increased over the study period, which is consistent with a decline in prevalence of smoking in the general female population and in the overall obstetric population in Australia during the study period . These findings are likely to reflect the effectiveness of Australia's tobacco‐control public health interventions, and the efforts of the health system to promote smoking cessation among pregnant women …”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
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“…The proportion of women who started smoking during the second pregnancy (3.6%) was lower than those being reported in US studies (4.8–6.2%) but higher than the finding from a Norwegian study (2.3%) . It is an encouraging finding that the trend in quitting increased over the study period, which is consistent with a decline in prevalence of smoking in the general female population and in the overall obstetric population in Australia during the study period . These findings are likely to reflect the effectiveness of Australia's tobacco‐control public health interventions, and the efforts of the health system to promote smoking cessation among pregnant women …”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…The recording of maternal smoking in perinatal records and hospital admission records has been validated previously (medical records as the gold standard), with respective sensitivities of 89.6% and 66.2%, respective positive predictive values of 96.1% and 93.0%, and specificities of 99.0% . Our algorithm to combine smoking information from the two sources of data has similar utility to using medical records in identifying pregnant smokers . A total of 846 women (0.5%) with an unknown smoking status in either the first ( n = 395) or second pregnancy ( n = 469) were excluded.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…Compared with all women giving birth in 2005 to 2012, a higher proportion of women included in this study belonged to low (37.3% vs 23.0%) or middle socio‐economic group (SES) (40.5% vs 33.9%), delivered in a public hospital (93.6% vs 75.8%), and had their first antenatal visit after the first trimester (35.7% vs 29.6%). Included women also had a higher prevalence of smoking during pregnancy (27.2% vs 12.2%), noting that smoking is under‐recorded in the NSW PDC …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The beginning and end points of cohort entry ensure that dispensing data were available for at least 1 year prior to conception and deliveries in 2012 did not disproportionately include pregnancies with gestation shorter than 40 weeks. Maternal smoking status in pregnancy was derived from either perinatal or maternal hospital admission data [25]. During the study period, there were changes in maternal smoking items in the perinatal data collections (2010 in WA and 2011 in NSW).…”
Section: Study Populationmentioning
confidence: 99%