212864 Smokefree policies among Asian American women: Comparisons by education status

Monday, November 9, 2009: 11:00 AM

Moon S. Chen, PhD, MPH , Population Research & Cancer Disparities, University of California, Davis Cancer Center, Sacramento, CA
Elisa Tong, MD , Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA
Hao Tang, PhD , California Tobacco Control Program, California Department of Public Health, Sacramento, CA
Janice Y. Tsoh, PhD , Department of Psychiatry, UCSF, San Francisco, CA
Candice Wong, MD, PhD , Institute for Health and Aging, UC San Francisco, San Francisco, CA
Background: California has significantly decreased racial/ethnic and educational disparities in smoke-free home and indoor work policies. California's ethnic-specific surveys present an opportunity to disaggregate data and examine the impact of California's smoke-free social norm campaign for Asian-American women.

Methods: The California Tobacco Use Surveys for Chinese Americans and Korean Americans were conducted in 2003 and analyzed in 2008 to compare women with lower (< high school graduate) or higher education status for smoke-free policy adoption and enforcement.

Results: Lower-educated and higher-educated women had similar proportions of smoke-free policies at home (58%) or indoor work (90%). However, lower-educated women were more likely than higher-educated women to report anyone ever smoking at home (OR=1.62, 95% CI=1.06, 2.48, p=0.03) and exposure during the past 2 weeks at an indoor workplace (OR=2.43, 95% CI= 1.30, 4.55, p=0.005), even after controlling for ethnicity, smoke-free policy, knowledge about the health consequences of secondhand smoke exposure, and acculturation. There was no interaction between education and knowledge about secondhand smoke health harms.

Conclusions: The intended consequences of California's tobacco-control efforts have resulted in similar rates of smoke-free policies at home and in indoor work environments among Asian-American women across educational levels. However, an unintended consequence of this success is a disparity in enforcement by educational status, with lower-educated Asian-American women reporting greater smoke exposure despite similar rates of knowledge about the health consequences of secondhand smoke exposure. Besides establishing policies, lower-educated Asian-American women may need to be empowered to assert and enforce their right to smoke-free environments.

Learning Objectives:
To describe the California Tobacco Use Surveys for Chinese Americans and Korean Americans. To compare smokefree policies for home and indoor work by education status among Asian American women. To compare self-reported exposure at home and indoor work by education status among Asian American women. To discuss possible explanations for the difference in self-reported exposure at home and indoor work among Asian American women, even after controlling for knowledge about secondhand smoke health harms, smokefree policy, and smoking status.

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I contributed to the paper upon which the panel is based.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.