
January
16, 2004
|
MOMS program
helps mothers-to-be stay smokefree
With the beginning of a new year, promises are often
made to live a healthier and more fulfilling life. To quit smoking is
a common New Year's resolution, but for one group of smokers pregnant
women smoking cessation is a challenge that can't wait for a holiday.
For these smokers, quitting is an urgent need because smoking can affect
not only the course of the pregnancy but also the health of the baby.
Most expectant mothers know that smoking can harm their unborn children.
Some statistics say about one quarter of women who smoke quit on their
own soon after they learn of a pregnancy and long before their first prenatal
visit. The other three-quarters of women often struggle throughout pregnancy
to try to quit. It is for these women that the MGH Tobacco Research and
Treatment Center is conducting a research program to test a new approach
to the problem.
Called the Mom and Me Smokefree (MOMS) program, it is a four-year study
funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Smokefree Families Program.
Designed by Elyse Park, PhD, the program is testing whether providing
smoking cessation counseling by telephone can help women stop smoking.
The counselors initiate telephone calls on a regular basis to a pregnant
smoker throughout her pregnancy and for two months after delivery to provide
advice and support as she struggles to remain smoke free. The counselors
also provide help in managing the common stresses of pregnancy that make
quitting difficult. "We know how difficult it is to quit smoking,"
explains Park. "We designed MOMS to reach out and help."
The study, led by Nancy Rigotti, MD, director of the center, is investigating
whether this novel program will increase the proportion of pregnant women
who quit during pregnancy and continue being smokefree once the baby is
born. The study is recruiting women throughout eastern Massachusetts who
receive prenatal care from a number of obstetric practices, including
the MGH Vincent Obstetrics and Gynecology Service. The program also is
being offered to all pregnant women who are members of Tufts Health Plan.
"We hope this program will give us a new tool to help pregnant women
succeed quitting smoking,"says Rigotti. "Quitting during pregnancy
not only helps ensure a healthy baby, but it also benefits the mother's
own health for life and reduces exposure to second-hand smoke for her
entire family."
For more information about the study, call study counselor Kristi Kangas
at
(617) 724-0930.
|