Cleansing breaths
Research targets pregnant smokers
鈥媁hile opioid addiction dominates the headlines, more people in the United States are addicted to nicotine than to any other drug.
Two of the most notable effects of nicotine on the brain are increases in the levels of dopamine and epinephrine (adrenaline); the smoker feels less anxious and more alert.
鈥淣icotine creates changes in the brain鈥檚 neurotransmitters, and the more you use nicotine, the more changes occur,鈥 says Rosemary Collier 鈥09, MS 鈥13, PhD 鈥16, clinical assistant professor of nursing at 黑料视频. The number of smokers aged 18 to 24 is estimated to be as high as 30 percent, and this is especially troubling, she adds, 鈥渂ecause their brains are not fully formed, and brain development can be affected by nicotine.鈥
Most smokers who attempt to quit will relapse within a week, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). It can take about 10 tries to achieve success.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 any single, good way to break a nicotine addiction,鈥 says Binghamton Professor Gary James. 鈥淐old turkey is really difficult, but it can be done, especially if you have incentive to stop.鈥
Pregnancy can be a big incentive. In 2008, Geraldine Britton, PhD 鈥04, assistant professor of nursing, launched the , a Decker School of Nursing initiative that focuses on campus activities, community outreach and creating curriculum that engages undergraduate students in research. Britton, Collier and James are part of ITURP, along with Steven Lynn, distinguished professor of psychology; Joyce Rhodes-Keefe 鈥82, MS 鈥08, clinical assistant professor of nursing; and Lori Sprague 鈥95, MS 鈥09, clinical assistant professor of nursing.
The program鈥檚 community outreach efforts primarily focus on pregnant smokers and originated in 1998 with Britton鈥檚 early work testing a nurse-managed perinatal cessation program. Sprague built upon this work and recently created a video that is delivered to pregnant women during their first prenatal visit to a healthcare provider.
Being tested in healthcare clinics in Binghamton and Johnson City, N.Y., and in Scranton and Wellsboro, Pa., the educational video is paired with a self-administered tobacco-use survey; both are delivered via iPad. The video is narrated by children and includes stories from real nurses and pregnant women who smoked.
Sprague says having the women complete the survey and watch the video without a healthcare provider in the room results in more honest responses.
鈥淲e learned that the women weren鈥檛 telling the providers they smoked because they didn鈥檛 want a lecture,鈥 Sprague says. 鈥淭hey felt they were being judged, and we had to remove judgment because we need accurate information so we can develop the most effective intervention for each individual.鈥
In addition, the video relieves healthcare providers from the burden of having to deliver a 鈥渘o smoking while pregnant鈥 message that could strain provider-patient relationships.
Sprague will conclude testing this year and hopes the video and survey will one day be in use in healthcare clinics around the country.
The interdisciplinary nature of ITURP is especially attractive to James, who is on the faculty in the nursing, biomedical engineering and anthropology departments. 鈥淣icotine addiction shouldn鈥檛 be studied just in nursing, or medicine,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to be in the 鈥榗racks鈥 between disciplines, where you take some things from here and some things from there. I think that鈥檚 where the answers are going to be.鈥