Titre :
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Greater Manchester's pioneering Smokefree Pregnancy Programme leads the way in reducing smoking rates (2024)
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Auteurs :
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Jane Coyne ;
Fran Frankland
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Type de document :
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Article : texte imprimé
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Dans :
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Midirs. Midwifery Digest (Vol. 34, n° 2, juin 2024)
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Article en page(s) :
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p. 161-162
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Langues:
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Anglais
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Sujets :
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Paramédical (MeSH)
Angleterre
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Arrêt de la consommation de tabac
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Arrêter de fumer
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Comportement de réduction des risques
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Grossesse
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Résumé :
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National ambitions seek to reduce smoking rates in pregnancy to less than five per cent by 2030 (Balogun & Harker 2023), while increasing the choice and personalisation of services that women and their families are offered. The recently published Chief Medical Office Report for 2018 (Davies 2018) also commits to halve smoking-in-pregnancy inequalities experienced across different communities and geographies by 2024. There is strong evidence that reducing smoking in pregnancy reduces the likelihood of stillbirth and impacts positively on other aspects of the care bundle by reducing the incidence of fetal growth restriction and intrapartum complications (NHS England 2019a, 2019b). In turn, it reduces the financial burden by helping to alleviate the cost of smoking to society in England (roughly {49.2 billion per annum), as well as the direct cost to the NHS (estimated at {1.9 billion) and costs to social care (at {15 billion) (Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) 2023).
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