A cross-sectional study of the prevalence and correlates of tobacco Use in Chennai, Delhi and Karachi: data from the CARRS study

Berg, Carla J. ; Ajay, Vamadevan S. ; Ali, Mohammed K. ; Kondal, Dimple ; Khan, Hassan M. ; Shivashankar, Roopa ; Pradeepa, Rajendra ; Mohan, Deepa ; Fatmi, Zafar ; Kadir, Muhammad M. ; Tandon, Nikhil ; Mohan, Viswanathan ; Narayan, K. M. Venkat ; Prabhakaran, Dorairaj (2015) A cross-sectional study of the prevalence and correlates of tobacco Use in Chennai, Delhi and Karachi: data from the CARRS study BMC Public Health, 15 (1). Article ID 483. ISSN 1471-2458

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Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-015-1817-z

Abstract

Background: Tobacco burdens in India and Pakistan require continued efforts to quantify tobacco use and its impacts. We examined the prevalence and sociodemographic and health-related correlates of tobacco use in Delhi, Chennai (India) and Karachi (Pakistan). Methods: Analysis of representative surveys of 11,260 participants (selected through multistage cluster random sampling; stratified by gender and age) in 2011 measured socio-demographics, tobacco use history, comorbid health conditions, and salivary cotinine. We used bivariate and multivariate regression analyses to examine factors associated with tobacco use. Results: Overall, 51.8% were females, and 61.6% were below the age of 45 years. Lifetime (ever) tobacco use prevalence (standardized for world population) was 45.0%, 41.3% and 42.5% among males and 7.6%, 8.5% and 19.7 among females in Chennai, Delhi and Karachi, respectively. Past 6 month tobacco use prevalence (standardized for world population) was 38.6%, 36.1% and 39.1% among males and 7.3%, 7.1% and 18.6% among females in Chennai, Delhi and Karachi, respectively. In multivariable regression analyses, residing in Delhi or Karachi versus Chennai; older age; lower education; earning less income; lower BMI; were each associated with tobacco use in both sexes. In addition, semi-skilled occupation versus not working and alcohol use were associated with tobacco use in males and having newly diagnosed dyslipidemia was associated with lower odds of tobacco use among females. Mean salivary cotinine levels were higher among tobacco users versus nonusers (235.4; CI: 187.0-283.8 vs. 29.7; CI: 4.2, 55.2, respectively). Conclusion: High prevalence of tobacco use in the South Asian region, particularly among men, highlights the urgency to address this serious public health problem. Our analyses suggest targeted prevention and cessation interventions focused on lower socioeconomic groups may be particularly important.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to BioMed Central.
Keywords:Tobacco Use; Southeast Asia; Secondhand Smoke Exposure; Population Studies
ID Code:106912
Deposited On:26 Jun 2017 09:41
Last Modified:26 Jun 2017 09:41

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