Department of Community Health and Health Behavior, School of Public Health and Health Professions, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Buffalo, NY 14214-8028, USA. ggiovino@buff alo.edu
Lancet. 2012 Aug 18;380(9842):668-79. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61085-X.
Despite the high global burden of diseases caused by tobacco, valid and comparable prevalence data for patterns of adult tobacco use and factors influencing use are absent for many low-income and middle-income countries. We assess these patterns through analysis of data from the Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS).
Between Oct 1, 2008, and March 15, 2010, GATS used nationally representative household surveys with comparable methods to obtain relevant information from individuals aged 15 years or older in 14 low-income and middle-income countries (Bangladesh, Brazil, China, Egypt, India, Mexico, Philippines, Poland, Russia, Thailand, Turkey, Ukraine, Uruguay, and Vietnam). We compared weighted point estimates and 95% CIs of tobacco use between these 14 countries and with data from the 2008 UK General Lifestyle Survey and the 2006-07 US Tobacco Use Supplement to the Current Population Survey. All these surveys had cross-sectional study designs.
In countries participating in GATS, 48·6% (95% CI 47·6-49·6) of men and 11·3% (10·7-12·0) of women were tobacco users. 40·7% of men (ranging from 21·6% in Brazil to 60·2% in Russia) and 5·0% of women (0·5% in Egypt to 24·4% in Poland) in GATS countries smoked a tobacco product. Manufactured cigarettes were favoured by most smokers (82%) overall, but smokeless tobacco and bidis were commonly used in India and Bangladesh. For individuals who had ever smoked daily, women aged 55-64 years at the time of the survey began smoking at an older age than did equivalently aged men in most GATS countries. However, those individuals who had ever smoked daily and were aged 25-34-years when surveyed started to do so at much the same age in both sexes. Quit ratios were very low (<20% overall) in China, India, Russia, Egypt, and Bangladesh.
The first wave of GATS showed high rates of smoking in men, early initiation of smoking in women, and low quit ratios, reinforcing the view that efforts to prevent initiation and promote cessation of tobacco use are needed to reduce associated morbidity and mortality.
Bloomberg Philanthropies' Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Brazilian and Indian Governments.
尽管烟草导致的疾病在全球范围内负担沉重,但许多低收入和中等收入国家缺乏关于成人烟草使用模式和影响使用因素的有效和可比的流行率数据。我们通过对全球成人烟草调查(GATS)的数据进行分析来评估这些模式。
2008 年 10 月 1 日至 2010 年 3 月 15 日期间,GATS 使用具有可比性方法的全国代表性家庭调查,从 14 个低收入和中等收入国家(孟加拉国、巴西、中国、埃及、印度、墨西哥、菲律宾、波兰、俄罗斯、泰国、土耳其、乌克兰、乌拉圭和越南)的 15 岁及以上的个人中获取相关信息。我们比较了这些国家的烟草使用加权点估计值和 95%置信区间(CI)与 2008 年英国普通生活方式调查和 2006-07 年美国当前人口调查烟草使用补充调查的数据。所有这些调查都采用了横断面研究设计。
在参与 GATS 的国家中,48.6%(95%CI 47.6-49.6)的男性和 11.3%(10.7-12.0)的女性是烟草使用者。40.7%的男性(范围从巴西的 21.6%到俄罗斯的 60.2%)和 5.0%的女性(埃及的 0.5%到波兰的 24.4%)在 GATS 国家吸烟。在大多数国家,大多数吸烟者(总体上 82%)偏爱制成的香烟,但在印度和孟加拉国,咀嚼烟草和比迪烟很常见。对于曾经每天吸烟的人,在调查时年龄在 55-64 岁的女性开始吸烟的年龄比大多数 GATS 国家中同龄男性要大。然而,那些曾经每天吸烟且在调查时年龄在 25-34 岁的人,他们开始吸烟的年龄在两性中几乎相同。戒烟率(总体上低于 20%)在中国、印度、俄罗斯、埃及和孟加拉国非常低。
GATS 的第一波调查显示男性吸烟率高、女性吸烟开始年龄早、戒烟率低,这进一步证实了需要努力预防开始吸烟和促进戒烟以减少相关发病率和死亡率的观点。
彭博慈善基金会减少烟草使用倡议、比尔和梅琳达盖茨基金会、巴西和印度政府。