Gilman Stephen E, Martin Laurie T, Abrams David B, Kawachi Ichiro, Kubzansky Laura, Loucks Eric B, Rende Richard, Rudd Rima, Buka Stephen L
Department of Society, Human Development, and Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Int J Epidemiol. 2008 Jun;37(3):615-24. doi: 10.1093/ije/dym250. Epub 2008 Jan 6.
Despite abundant evidence that lower education is associated with a higher risk of smoking, whether the association is causal has not been convincingly established.
We investigated the association between education and lifetime smoking patterns in a birth cohort established in 1959 and followed through adulthood (n = 1311). We controlled for a wide range of potential confounders that were measured prior to school entry, and also estimated sibling fixed effects models to control for unmeasured familial vulnerability to smoking.
In the full sample of participants, regression analyses adjusting for multiple childhood factors (including socioeconomic status, IQ, behavioural problems, and medical conditions) indicated that the number of pack-years smoked was higher among individuals with less than high school education [rate ratio (RR) = 1.58, confidence interval (CI) = 1.31, 1.91]. However, in the sibling fixed effects analysis the RR was 1.23 (CI = 0.80, 1.93). Similarly, adjusted models estimated in the full sample showed that individuals with less than high school education had fewer short-term (RR = 0.40; CI = 0.23, 0.69) and long-term (RR = 0.59; CI = 0.42, 0.83) quit attempts, and were less likely to quit smoking (odds ratio = 0.34; CI = 0.19, 0.62). The effects of education on quitting smoking were attenuated in the sibling fixed effects models that controlled for familial vulnerability to smoking.
A substantial portion of the education differential in smoking that has been repeatedly observed is attributable to factors shared by siblings that contribute to shortened educational careers and to lifetime smoking trajectories. Reducing disparities in cigarette smoking, including educational disparities, may therefore require approaches that focus on factors early in life that influence smoking risk over the adult life span.
尽管有大量证据表明低教育水平与更高的吸烟风险相关,但这种关联是否为因果关系尚未得到令人信服的确立。
我们在一个1959年建立的出生队列中调查了教育与终生吸烟模式之间的关联,并对其进行成年期随访(n = 1311)。我们控制了入学前测量的一系列潜在混杂因素,并估计了兄弟姐妹固定效应模型以控制未测量的家族吸烟易感性。
在参与者的全样本中,对多个童年因素(包括社会经济地位、智商、行为问题和健康状况)进行调整的回归分析表明,高中以下学历者的吸烟包年数更高[率比(RR)= 1.58,置信区间(CI)= 1.31,1.91]。然而,在兄弟姐妹固定效应分析中,RR为1.23(CI = 0.80,1.93)。同样,在全样本中估计的调整模型显示,高中以下学历者的短期(RR = 0.40;CI = 0.23,0.69)和长期(RR = 0.59;CI = 0.42,0.83)戒烟尝试较少,且戒烟可能性较小(优势比 = 0.34;CI = 0.19,0.62)。在控制了家族吸烟易感性的兄弟姐妹固定效应模型中,教育对戒烟的影响减弱。
反复观察到的吸烟方面的教育差异很大一部分可归因于兄弟姐妹共有的因素,这些因素导致教育生涯缩短和终生吸烟轨迹。因此,减少吸烟差异,包括教育差异,可能需要关注生命早期影响成年期吸烟风险的因素的方法。