BMC Research Notes (Nov 2019)

Geospatial mapping and resource utilization tool in support of a national smoke-free public housing rule

  • Sonia Tetlow,
  • Brian Gurbaxani,
  • Corinne Graffunder,
  • Connor Owen,
  • Diem Tran,
  • Jiali Zhao,
  • Jose A. Rodriguez,
  • Aaron Ahn,
  • Kristie Choe,
  • Vishal Mummigatti,
  • Divya Vedula,
  • Kathleen Hayes,
  • Miriam Kelly,
  • Simon McNabb,
  • Julie Swann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-019-4815-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Objective To advance public health support for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s smoke-free rule, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention collaborated with the Georgia Institute of Technology to develop a geospatial mapping tool. The objective was to create a tool state and local public health agencies could use to tailor smoke-free educational materials and cessation interventions for specific public housing development resident populations. Results The resulting “Extinguish Tool” includes an interactive map of U.S. public housing developments (PHDs) and healthcare facilities that provides detailed information on individual PHDs, their proximity to existing healthcare facilities, and the demographic characteristics of residents. The tool also estimates the number of PHD residents who smoke cigarettes and calculates crude estimates of the potential economic benefits of providing cessation interventions to these residents. The geospatial mapping tool project serves as an example of a collaborative and innovative public health approach to protecting the health and well-being of the nation’s two million public housing residents, including 760,000 children, from the harms of tobacco smoking and secondhand smoke exposure in the places where they live, play, and gather.

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