Today - The magazine of the Medical College of Georgia - Winter/Spring 2007 Volume 34, Number 3
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Newsbriefs
Cancer Center Recognized
Investiture Ceremony
Research Excellence
Nursing Diversity
Special Assistant Named
Backpack Facts
Seizure Study
Featured Articles
A Statewide Initiative
Brain Gain
Patient as Teacher
Taking Charge
Clarion Call for Kids
Easy as 1-2-3
Honoring the Legacy
Gut Feeling
They’ve Got Your Number
Specialized Delivery
Man on a Mission
Glitz, Glamour and Gratitude
Vessel of Life
Homecoming 2008
In Every Issue

Dear Readers
Profile in Giving
Gift Planning
Class Notes
Newmakers
New Faces
Reflections

Clarion Call for KIDS

Grant Aims to Help Children Stay Tobacco-Free

A smoking-prevention strategy that targets black fourth-graders and their parents is under study in urban and rural Georgia.

Researchers want to know if they can keep these children from smoking and help smoking parents quit, according to Dr. Martha S. Tingen, nurse researcher at MCG’s Georgia Prevention Institute, and interim program leader for cancer prevention and control in the MCG Cancer Center.

Dr. Tingen is principal investigator on a $2.5 million National Cancer Institute grant to determine if this novel strategy of concurrent intervention in the classroom and at home reduces smoking and related disability and death in blacks. Blacks tend to have higher rates of second-hand smoke exposure and more adverse health effects than whites.

In a Nov. 15 ceremony at the gazebo formerly known as the Smoking Hut, MCG, MCG Health, Inc. and the Physicians Practice Group officially became tobacco-free. MCG Tobacco-Free
In a Nov. 15 ceremony at the gazebo formerly known as the Smoking Hut, MCG, MCG Health, Inc. and the Physicians Practice Group officially became tobacco-free. Following a yearlong study and campus engagement effort by a task force of more than 40 representatives of the three organizations, tobacco products are now prohibited from all property—inside and out—owned, leased or controlled by MCG, MCG Health, Inc. and the PPG. The initiative’s kickoff date coincided with the American Cancer Society’s 31st annual Great American Smokeout.


 

“Every day in Georgia, 84 kids between 10 to 13 years of age start smoking cigarettes,” says Dr. Tingen. “Ninety percent of all smokers start before they are out of high school. If we can help keep kids from smoking before they get out of high school, they probably won’t ever start. I am hoping the fourth-graders haven’t started smoking, but I am thinking a lot of them still are exposed to tobacco use and second-hand smoke in the home.”

Researchers are enrolling 350 students and their parents or guardians in 16 elementary schools in Augusta, Ga., and rural Jefferson County, Ga., about 60 miles away. During fourth and fifth grades, half the children will get two intense learning sessions per week over four weeks of Life Skills Training, developed by Dr. Gilbert J. Botvin, director of the Institute for Prevention Research at Cornell University Medical College.

Children will learn basics such as communication skills, decision-making and assertiveness. Their parents/guardians will get similar instruction as well as additional information on topics such as effective parenting and role-modeling.

Pilot studies in 60 families showed Life Skills Training increased refusal skills and self-esteem, better-equipping kids to decline a friend’s offer of a cigarette, Dr. Tingen says. Parents and guardians also liked working with their children on the project. In those studies, 40 percent of the parents said they smoked, 80 percent of children reported that their parents smoked and all children had saliva testing that showed they were exposed to second-hand smoke.

Dr. Tingen estimates that 30-40 percent of the parents/guardians in the new study will be smokers. They will

Jamie Martin already knows what he’s going to say if a friend asks him to smoke a cigarette.

"I SAY NO..."
Jamie Martin already knows what he’s going to say if a friend asks him to smoke a cigarette.

“I say ‘no’ because cigarettes are bad things to do and they will give you cancer,” says the fourth-grader at Carver Elementary School in Wadley, Ga. “They are bad, and after you light them up, they start stinking because the stuff … in them starts burning.”

On a recent October day, Jamie and his mom, Tanika Martin, signed up for an MCG study designed to give them both more ammunition for this pivotal moment.

“They pick up bad habits by hanging around their friends, but I am trying my best to talk to them and let them know that … you don’t have to do what your friends say to do,” says Ms. Martin, who started talking about the hazards of smoking, drinking and other drugs to her eldest child, 9-year-old Jamie, when he was just a third-grader.

Angela Oglesby, counselor at the school of about 300 kids from pre-kindergarten to fifth grade, says Ms. Martin was right on target: by then, most kids are old enough to understand what they are hearing but—ideally—have not yet been confronted by their peers about such aberrant behaviors.

Smoking is not yet a problem at the school in the largely rural county seat of Jefferson County, Ga.—population just under 17,000 with about 2,000 people living in Wadley—but related problems with social skills, decision-making and self-control are recurring themes.

Mrs. Oglesby works proactively with students, using Life Skills Training in classrooms as well as small-group and individual counseling, to help them overcome peer pressure.

She thinks the MCG study, which also takes Life Skills Training and more to parents, is a great idea. “Parents want to be involved and learn to help their children make good decisions. They just need opportunities to learn how to do that.”

Carver Elementary families were part of early pilot studies that showed the school-home approach improved children’s refusal skills and self-esteem.

“Ultimately, what children are exposed to at home makes a greater impact on them than what they are exposed to at school,” Mrs. Oglesby says. “If schools and parents can work together and deliver the same message to the child, I think it makes a greater impact on the child.”
No doubt it has on Jamie.no smoking

Though he hasn’t yet been asked to sneak behind the school for a smoke, he’ll be ready when he is.


 

receive self-help information, motivational interviewing and nicotine patches. Motivational interviewing focuses on an individual’s strengths in prior situations to help quit smoking.

Children in the control group will receive Georgia’s standard health curriculum and their parents/guardians will receive general health education information on nutrition, physical activity and risk factors for cancer and cardiovascular disease.

Levels of cotinine, a breakdown product of nicotine readily measured in saliva, will be documented in both groups at baseline, at two years and as a follow-up at three years. “Cotinine levels can be measured so precisely, it can tell if you are a smoker, if you are not a smoker but are exposed to second-hand smoke, or if you are not a smoker and not exposed,” Dr. Tingen says.

“We are trying to create this environment where parents work with kids on expectations at home so they can say, ‘We are just not going to be one of those families that have smoking going on,’” she says. “Young children are greatly influenced by what their parents do. When parents role-model smoking, it has a dramatic effect on their children. In fact, most children who smoke got their first cigarettes from their parents.”

Her goals include turning things around so that children become change agents for parents. Having Life Skills Training as a part of the standard curriculum would help, she says, noting the courses offered through the grant would be an easy permanent fit since they meet 70 percent of mandated state health education requirements. Dr. Tingen, a certified Life Skills trainer, will train health teachers, school nurses and counselors to lead the programs. Children will start taking classes this winter.

“Tobacco has been and still is the number-one cause of premature death and disability,” Dr. Tingen says. “It’s directly linked to many cancers, not just the lungs, but also the jaw, the stomach, the bladder, as well as cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure and stroke.” As long as nicotine is in the body, it’s doing damage, she says. “That’s in addition to the other 4,000 chemicals in cigarettes that you are huffing and puffing on or that you are exposed to.”

Whites tend to metabolize and excrete nicotine more quickly than blacks, exacerbating adverse effects in blacks, according to her previous studies of four genes that metabolize nicotine. Smoking rates among all Georgia students have increased since 1991, with black students’ increase the highest at 80 percent. Black youths also tend to have high exposure rates to second-hand smoke, MCG researchers say.

“Every child at some point is given the opportunity to start smoking,” Dr. Tingen says. “Study after study has been done on kids in the ninth and 10th grades asking if they could quit, and they all say they could easily quit before graduation if they want. But you go back and survey them and they can’t quit. Quitting smoking is incredibly difficult; the average person tries five times before they are successful. Our goal is that children never start and that parents role model this expectation.”

Co-investigators are Dr. Jeannette Andrews, chair of the MCG Department of Biobehavioral Nursing, and Dr. Janie Heath, associate dean for academic affairs, both in the School of Nursing, Dr. Frank Treiber, MCG vice president for research, and Dr. Jennifer Waller, associate professor in the MCG Department of Biostatistics, School of Graduate Studies.

-- Toni Baker


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March 05, 2008