@article{2984910, title = "A Single-center, Prospective, Observational Study on Maternal smoking During Pregnancy in Greece: The Helena Study", author = "Skalis, G. and Archontakis, S. and Thomopoulos, C. and Andrianopoulou, I. and Papazachou, O. and Vamvakou, G. and Katsi, V. and Makris, T. and Makris, T.", journal = "Tobacco Prevention and Cessation", year = "2021", volume = "7", pages = "1-9", publisher = "SELP Sellier European Law Publishers", doi = "10.18332/tpc/131824", abstract = "Introduction The unequivocal association between exposure to smoke and numerous complications of pregnancy, demonstrated in the last decades, has led to a significant decrease of smoking rates in pregnancy. The aim of the present study was to determine the prevalence of maternal smoking and to elucidate factors predisposing to it among pregnant women in Athens, Greece. Methods A population of 1700 pregnant women (mean age: 31.2±5.5 years) who visited consecutively the Cardiology Department of Helena Venizelou Maternity Hospital in Athens, Greece, between September 2016 and August 2017, was prospectively analyzed. Data regarding changes in the future mother’s smoking habit as well as different sociodemographic factors potentially related to these changes were recorded. Results Of the 1700 participants, 704 (41.4%) were smokers, and of those 52.4% quit smoking after knowledge of their pregnancy status. The overall prevalence of smoking in pregnancy was 19.7%. Prevalence was higher in women who were aged < 20 years (p=0.038), were multipara (p=0.032), had ≤12 years of education (p=0.044) and had a partner who was a smoker (p=0.047). Women aged ≤20 years were more likely to be persistent smokers at the beginning of pregnancy and demonstrated a higher prevalence of smoking during pregnancy (42.2% vs 19.7% in the overall study population). Conclusions Our data demonstrate that maternal smoking during pregnancy still remains a major public health issue in Greece with a prevalence higher than most other industrialized countries. © 2021 Skalis G. et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial 4.0 International License." }