PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Children exposed to tobacco smoke use more emergent health services

UC study: Childhood illness from tobacco smoke exposure drives up health care visits and costs

Children exposed to tobacco smoke use more emergent health services
2021-03-24
(Press-News.org) Tobacco smoke-exposed children utilize emergency and urgent care services more often than unexposed children, which contributes to a large toll on the nation's health care system, says research led by the University of Cincinnati. The study, recently published in the journal PLOS ONE, concluded: · Children who are exposed to tobacco smoke have higher pediatric emergency department visit costs compared to unexposed children. · A higher number of tobacco smoke-exposed children had an urgent care visit over a one-year period compared to unexposed children. · Tobacco smoke-exposed children had nearly twice the risk of being admitted to the hospital over a one-year period compared to unexposed children. "Despite major progress in tobacco control, about 4-in-10 children remain exposed to tobacco smoke. This exposure places developing children at higher risk for many health problems, including respiratory illnesses such as asthma, bronchiolitis and pneumonia," says health services researcher and lead author Ashley Merianos, an associate professor of health promotion and education in UC's School of Human Services. Merianos is also a research affiliate member of Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, the Thirdhand Smoke Research Consortium and the American Academy of Pediatrics Tobacco Consortium. The study, Merianos says, also lends insight into preventions such as standardizing and initiating tobacco smoke exposure reduction interventions in the urgent care, emergency and inpatient settings and promoting voluntary smoke-free home and car policies to help reduce children's tobacco smoke exposure and related consequences. "If every health care provider were to use each pediatric visit as an opportunity to screen and advise parents who smoke or vape to counsel parents about the dangers of secondhand and thirdhand smoke exposure to their children, rates of pediatric tobacco smoke exposure would decline," says pediatric emergency physician and senior author Melinda Mahabee-Gittens, a professor of pediatrics at Cincinnati Children's.

INFORMATION:

This work was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse; Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; and the National Cancer Institute. Study co-authors include: Roman Jandarov, Michael Lyons and Melinda Mahabee-Gittens at the UC College of Medicine and Judith Gordon, at the University of Arizona College of Nursing. The authors cite no conflict of interest.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Children exposed to tobacco smoke use more emergent health services

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Floating solar farms could help reduce impacts of climate change on lakes and reservoirs

Floating solar farms could help reduce impacts of climate change on lakes and reservoirs
2021-03-24
Floating solar farms could help to protect lakes and reservoirs from some of the harms of climate change, a new study suggests. However, given the complex nature of water bodies and differing designs of solar technologies, there could also be detrimental ecosystem impacts of deploying floating solar arrays. Conventional solar farms are controversial due to the amount of land they take up. This is leading to increasing interest in floating solar farms - making use of the additional space that bodies of water provide. So far, there are three commercial-size floating solar arrays in the UK, and hundreds more across the world. The number of installations is likely to grow significantly in coming decades as demand rises for renewable energy sources with more countries committing ...

Automatic trail cameras keep wildlife research going during pandemic

2021-03-24
For scientists, especially graduate students, who conduct fieldwork, every day is precious. Researchers meticulously prepare their equipment, procedures and timelines to make sure they get the data they need to do good science. So you can imagine the collective anxiety that fell across academia in spring 2020 when COVID-19 struck and many universities suspended in-person activities, including fieldwork. But for Austin Green, a doctoral student in the School of Biological Sciences and 2019 recipient of a National Geographic Society Early Career Grant, who studies the wildlife that lives in the canyons of the Wasatch Front, that anxiety was tempered by the knowledge that pandemic or no pandemic, his network of automated ...

Giant fossil's 'bird-brain'

Giant fossils bird-brain
2021-03-24
The largest flightless bird ever to live weighed in up to 600kg and had a whopping head about half a metre long - but its brain was squeezed for space. Dromornis stirtoni, the largest of the 'mihirungs' (an Aboriginal word for 'giant bird'), stood up to 3m high and had a cranium wider and higher than it was long due to a powerful big beak, leading Australian palaeontologists to look inside its brain space to see how it worked. The new study, just published in the journal Diversity, examined the brains of the extinct giant mihirungs or dromornithid birds that were a distinctive part of the Australian fauna for many millions of years, before going extinct around 50,000 ...

Copper foam as a highly efficient, durable filter for reusable masks and air cleaners

Copper foam as a highly efficient, durable filter for reusable masks and air cleaners
2021-03-24
During the COVID-19 pandemic, people have grown accustomed to wearing facemasks, but many coverings are fragile and not easily disinfected. Metal foams are durable, and their small pores and large surface areas suggest they could effectively filter out microbes. Now, researchers reporting in ACS' Nano Letters have transformed copper nanowires into metal foams that could be used in facemasks and air filtration systems. The foams filter efficiently, decontaminate easily for reuse and are recyclable. When a person with a respiratory infection, such ...

Creating patterns spontaneously in synthetic materials

Creating patterns spontaneously in synthetic materials
2021-03-24
Nature produces a startling array of patterned materials, from the sensitive ridges on a person's fingertip to a cheetah's camouflaging spots. Although nature's patterns arise spontaneously during development, creating patterns on synthetic materials is more laborious. Now, researchers reporting in ACS Central Science have found an easy way to make patterned materials having complex microstructures with variations in mechanical, thermal and optical properties -- without the need for masks, molds or printers. In animals, patterns form before birth ...

Bees form scent-driven phone tree to pass along messages

Bees form scent-driven phone tree to pass along messages
2021-03-24
Honeybees play a scent-driven game of telephone to guide members of a colony back to their queen, according to a new study led by University of Colorado Boulder. The research, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, highlights how insects with limited cognitive abilities can achieve complex feats when they work together--even creating what looks like a miniature and buzzing version of a telecommunications network. The findings also serve as a testament to a honeybee's love for its queen. These matriarchs are the most important members of any hive: They're the only females able ...

Scientists improve a photosynthetic enzyme by adding fluorophores

Scientists improve a photosynthetic enzyme by adding fluorophores
2021-03-24
Given the finite nature of fossil fuel reserves and the devastating environmental impacts of relying on fossil fuels, the development of clean energy sources is among the most pressing challenges facing modern industrial civilization. Solar energy is an attractive clean energy option, but the widescale implementation of solar energy technologies will depend on the development of efficient ways of converting light energy into chemical energy. Like many other research groups, the members of Professor Takehisa Dewa's research team at Nagoya Institute of Technology in Japan have turned to biological photosynthetic apparatuses, which ...

Electrochemical synthesis of formate from CO2 using a Sn/reduced graphene oxide catalyst

Electrochemical synthesis of formate from CO2 using a Sn/reduced graphene oxide catalyst
2021-03-24
[Background] Decreasing the emission and efficient utilization (fixation) of carbon dioxide (CO2) are worldwide issues to prevent global warming. Promotion of the use of renewable energy is effective in reducing CO2 emissions. However, since there are large time-dependent fluctuations and large regional differences in renewable energy production, it is necessary to establish a fixation technology to allow efficient energy transportation and storage. Thus, there is increasing interest in technologies for synthesizing useful chemicals from CO2 using electricity derived from renewable energy. ...

Alzheimer's patients' cognition improves with Sargramostim (GM-CSF), new study shows

2021-03-24
A new study suggests that Sargramostim, a medication often used to boost white blood cells after cancer treatments, is also effective in treating and improving memory in people with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease. This medication comprises of a natural human protein produced by recombinant DNA technology (yeast-derived rhu GM-CSF/Leukine®). The study, from the University of Colorado Alzheimer's and Cognition Center at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus (CU Anschutz), presents evidence from their clinical trial that shows that Sargramostim may ...

Midlife loneliness is a risk factor for Dementia and Alzheimer's disease

2021-03-24
(Boston)--Being persistently lonely during midlife (ages 45-64) appears to make people more likely to develop dementia and Alzheimer's Disease (AD) later in life. However, people who recover from loneliness, appear to be less likely to suffer from dementia, compared to people who have never felt lonely. Loneliness is a subjective feeling resulting from a perceived discrepancy between desired and actual social relationships. Although loneliness does not itself have the status of a clinical disease, it is associated with a range of negative health outcomes, including sleep disturbances, depressive symptoms, cognitive impairment, and stroke. Still, feeling lonely may happen to anyone at some point in life, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Exotic observations with neutrons at the ILL

Scientists discover new gene-to-gene interaction increasing risk of alopecia

Chinese scientists find key genes to fight against crop parasites

Lung cancer cells can go ‘off grid’

An RNA inhibitor may effectively reduce a high-risk type of cholesterol in patients with cardiovascular disease

Research spotlight: Mapping lesions that cause psychosis to a human brain circuit and proposed stimulation target

New study identifies brain region that can prevent aggressive social behavior and induce pro social behavior

Telehealth may be closing the care gap for people with substance use disorder in rural areas

Stronger, safer, smarter: pioneering Zinc-based dissolvable implants for bone repair

Could peripheral neuropathy be stopped before it starts?

China Jurassic fossil discovery sheds light on bird origin

Long-term yogurt consumption tied to decreased incidence of certain types of colorectal cancer

Ovarian cancer discovery could turn failed treatment into lifesaver

DNA methylation clocks may require tissue-specific adjustments for accurate aging estimates

Tidal energy measurements help SwRI scientists understand Titan’s composition, orbital history

Data-driven networks influence convective-scale ensemble weather forecasts

Endocrine Society awards Baxter Prize to innovator in endocrine cancer drug discovery

Companies quietly switching out toxic product ingredients in response to California law

Can math save content creators? A new model proposes fairer revenue distribution methods for streaming services

Study examines grief of zoo employees and volunteers across the US after animal losses

National study underway to test new mechanical heart pump

Antarctica’s only native insect’s unique survival mechanism

How Earth's early cycles shaped the chemistry of life

Ukraine war forces planes to take longer routes, raising CO2

Negative refraction of light using atoms instead of metamaterials

High BP may develop at different ages and paces in East & South Asian adults in the UK

Meet the newly discovered brain cell that allows you to remember objects

Engineered animals show new way to fight mercury pollution

The 3,000-year coral reef shutdown: a mysterious pause and a remarkable recovery

Worm surface chemistry reveals secrets to their development and survival

[Press-News.org] Children exposed to tobacco smoke use more emergent health services
UC study: Childhood illness from tobacco smoke exposure drives up health care visits and costs