RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Smoking rates in pregnant women one year before and after the Irish workplace smoke-free policy: A widening gap? JF European Respiratory Journal JO Eur Respir J FD European Respiratory Society SP p1551 VO 38 IS Suppl 55 A1 Kabir, Zubair A1 McAvoy, Helen A1 Reulbach, Udo A1 Wilde, Jane A1 Daly, Sean A1 Clancy, Luke YR 2011 UL https://publications.ersnet.org//content/38/Suppl_55/p1551.abstract AB Objectives: To examine smoking rates during pregnancy among Irish mothers across selected socio-economic and demographic maternal characteristics one year before and after the Irish workplace smoke-free policy introduced in March 2004.Methods: Individual-level data on mothers' with singleton live-births were analyzed for the years 2003 [n=7,593] and 2005 [n=7,648] in a Dublin university teaching hospital. Smokers were classified as current smokers and are self-reported. Age-standardized smoking rates for the two main sub-groups of employment status (working vs. not working) were estimated across maternal age, ethnicity and marital status based on the 2002 Census, as the standard. Relative Index of Inequality (RII), with 95% CI, in age-standardized smoking rates was computed (comparing not working with working mothers) for each calendar year.Results: Overall, there was a 12% significant decline in crude smoking rates from 23.4% [in 2003] to 20.6% [in 2005]. RII in age-standardized smoking rates for 2003 was 0.65 (0.50-0.81) and increased to 0.79 (0.62-0.96) in 2005 (widened relatively by 22%) when comparing pregnant mothers not working with those working separately for each of the two calendar years.Conclusions: Smoking rates in unemployed pregnant mothers remain high in Ireland, despite a significant decline one year after the comprehensive smoke-free policy. The disparity in smoking rates observed between employed and unemployed women has widened by 22%. Tobacco control and smoking cessation approaches must develop successful approaches to targeting unemployed women in pregnancy if social inequalities in birth outcomes and women's health are to be tackled.