Pampel Fred C
University of Colorado, Boulder, USA.
Int J Comp Sociol. 2006 Dec;47(6):466-487. doi: 10.1177/0020715206070267.
The worldwide spread of tobacco use in recent decades raises questions about the relative prevalence of smoking among men and women. Does the degree of gender equality in nations promote equality in cigarette use? Does rising use of cigarettes by women stem from the stage of cigarette diffusion and earlier increases among men? Or have changes in economic factors and smoking policy affected the sexes differently? This study uses aggregate data for 106 nations, measures of smoking prevalence circa 2000, and lagged measures of gender equality, cigarette diffusion, and tobacco access to address these questions and evaluate the underlying theories. With the logged ratio of female to male prevalence as the dependent variable, regression results reveal that gender equality has inconsistent effects on women's smoking relative to men, cigarette diffusion has more consistent and moderately strong effects, and economic factors have weak effects. Global patterns of adoption of cigarettes by women appear most closely associated with the early adoption by men and then movement through a regular pattern of cigarette diffusion.
近几十年来,烟草使用在全球范围内的传播引发了关于男性和女性吸烟相对流行程度的问题。各国的性别平等程度是否促进了香烟使用的平等?女性吸烟率的上升是源于香烟传播的阶段以及男性更早的吸烟率增长吗?还是经济因素和吸烟政策的变化对不同性别的影响有所不同?本研究使用了106个国家的汇总数据、2000年左右的吸烟流行率指标以及性别平等、香烟传播和烟草获取的滞后指标来解决这些问题并评估相关基础理论。以女性与男性吸烟流行率的对数比率作为因变量,回归结果显示,性别平等对女性吸烟相对于男性的影响并不一致,香烟传播有更一致且适度强烈的影响,而经济因素的影响较弱。全球女性采用香烟的模式似乎与男性早期采用香烟然后通过常规的香烟传播模式密切相关。