University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80304-0484, USA.
Demography. 2011 May;48(2):653-74. doi: 10.1007/s13524-011-0027-2.
The spread of tobacco use from the West to other parts of the world, especially among disadvantaged socioeconomic groups, raises concerns not only about the indisputable harm to global health but also about worsening health inequality. Arguments relating to economic cost and diffusion posit that rising educational disparities in tobacco use-and associated disparities in health and premature mortality-are associated with higher national income and more advanced stages of cigarette diffusion, particularly among younger persons and males. To test these arguments, we use World Health Survey data for 99,661 men and 123,953 women from 50 low-income to upper-middle-income nations. Multilevel logistic regression models show that increases in national income and cigarette diffusion widen educational disparities in smoking among young persons and men but have weaker influences among older persons and women. The results suggest that the social and economic patterns of cigarette adoption across low- and middle-income nations foretell continuing, and perhaps widening, disparities in mortality.
烟草使用从西方传播到世界其他地区,尤其是在社会经济地位较低的群体中,这不仅引起了对全球健康不可否认的危害的关注,也引起了对健康不平等加剧的关注。与经济成本和扩散有关的论点认为,烟草使用方面教育差距的扩大——以及与健康和过早死亡相关的差距的扩大——与国民收入的提高和香烟扩散的更高级阶段有关,特别是在年轻人和男性中。为了检验这些论点,我们使用了来自 50 个低收入到中上收入国家的 99661 名男性和 123953 名女性的世界卫生调查数据。多层次逻辑回归模型表明,国民收入和香烟扩散的增加扩大了年轻人和男性中吸烟的教育差距,但对老年人和女性的影响较弱。结果表明,低收入和中等收入国家的香烟采用的社会和经济模式预示着死亡率的持续存在,甚至可能会扩大。