American Cancer Society, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
School of Psychology, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
PLoS One. 2019 Sep 6;14(9):e0220223. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220223. eCollection 2019.
Tobacco smoking is often more prevalent among those with lower socio-economic status (SES) in high-income countries, which can be driven by the inequalities in initiation and cessation of smoking. Smoking is a leading contributor to socio-economic disparities in health. To date, the evidence for any socio-economic inequality in smoking cessation is lacking, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This study examined the association between cessation behaviours and SES of smokers from eight LMICs.
Data among former and current adult smokers aged 18 and older came from contemporaneous Global Adult Tobacco Surveys (2008-2011) and the International Tobacco Control Surveys (2009-2013) conducted in eight LMICs (Bangladesh, Brazil, China, India, Mexico, Malaysia, Thailand and Uruguay). Adjusted odds ratios (AORs) of successful quitting in the past year by SES indicators (household income/wealth, education, employment status, and rural-urban residence) were estimated using multivariable logistic regression controlling for socio-demographics and average tobacco product prices. A random effects meta-analysis was used to combine the estimates of AORs pooled across countries and two concurrent surveys for each country.
Estimated quit rates among smokers (both daily and occasional) varied widely across countries. Meta-analysis of pooled AORs across countries and data sources indicated that there was no clear evidence of an association between SES indicators and successful quitting. The only exception was employed smokers, who were less likely to quit than their non-employed counterparts, which included students, homemakers, retirees, and the unemployed (pooled AOR≈0.8, p<0.10).
Lack of clear evidence of the impact of lower SES on adult cessation behaviour in LMICs suggests that lower-SES smokers are not less successful in their attempts to quit than their higher-SES counterparts. Specifically, lack of employment, which is indicative of younger age and lower nicotine dependence for students, or lower personal disposable income and lower affordability for the unemployed and the retirees, may be associated with quitting. Raising taxes and prices of tobacco products that lowers affordability of tobacco products might be a key strategy for inducing cessation behaviour among current smokers and reducing overall tobacco consumption. Because low-SES smokers are more sensitive to price increases, tobacco taxation policy can induce disproportionately larger decreases in tobacco consumption among them and help reduce socio-economic disparities in smoking and consequent health outcomes.
在高收入国家,社会经济地位(SES)较低的人群中,吸烟现象往往更为普遍,这可能是由于吸烟的开始和停止存在不平等现象所致。吸烟是导致健康方面社会经济差异的主要因素之一。迄今为止,关于戒烟方面是否存在任何社会经济不平等的证据尚不足,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)。本研究调查了来自八个 LMICs 的吸烟者的戒烟行为与 SES 之间的关系。
18 岁及以上的前吸烟者和现吸烟者的数据来自于同时进行的全球成人烟草调查(2008-2011 年)和国际烟草控制调查(2009-2013 年),这些调查在八个 LMICs(孟加拉国、巴西、中国、印度、墨西哥、马来西亚、泰国和乌拉圭)进行。使用多变量逻辑回归,在控制社会人口统计学和平均烟草产品价格的情况下,根据 SES 指标(家庭收入/财富、教育、就业状况和城乡居住情况)来估算过去一年成功戒烟的调整后比值比(AOR)。使用随机效应荟萃分析合并了国家间的估计值以及每个国家的两项同期调查的数据。
各国吸烟者(包括经常吸烟者和偶尔吸烟者)的戒烟率差异很大。对国家间和数据源进行荟萃分析的 AOR 表明,SES 指标与成功戒烟之间没有明确的关联。唯一的例外是就业吸烟者,他们比非就业者(包括学生、家庭主妇、退休人员和失业者)戒烟的可能性更小(合并 AOR≈0.8,p<0.10)。
缺乏明确的证据表明,较低的 SES 对 LMICs 中成年戒烟行为的影响表明,较低 SES 的吸烟者在戒烟尝试方面并不逊于较高 SES 的吸烟者。具体来说,缺乏就业机会可能与戒烟有关,这表明年轻人和尼古丁依赖程度较低的学生、或个人可支配收入较低和可负担性较低的失业者和退休者的就业机会较少。提高烟草产品的税收和价格,降低烟草产品的可负担性,可能是促使当前吸烟者戒烟并减少总体烟草消费的关键策略。由于低 SES 吸烟者对价格上涨更为敏感,烟草税收政策可以在他们中间引起不成比例的更大幅度的烟草消费下降,并有助于减少吸烟和由此产生的健康结果方面的社会经济差异。