Department of Public Health, North South University, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Public Health Foundation, Bangladesh (PHF,BD), Dhaka, Bangladesh.
BMJ Open. 2020 Nov 3;10(11):e038372. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038372.
To determine whether the odds of being a smoker differ based on social media use and social interactions among urban university students in Bangladesh.
Social media use and social interactions influence the smoking behaviour of Bangladeshi university students, particularly in starting and maintaining cigarette smoking.
A cross-sectional study using mixed methods on 600 student smokers and non-smokers recruited from two public and two private universities in Dhaka, Bangladesh, a lower middle-income country with limited resources. Exclusion criteria were those who did not use any form of social media and PhD students.
Odds of smoking were significantly higher for those who socialised more than 4 hours/day (p<0.05; OR 1.75; 95% CI 1.12 to 2.75) and typically at night (p<0.05; OR 2.80; 95% CI 1.95 to 4.00). Odds of smoking were also higher for those who liked (p<0.05; OR 4.85; 95% CI 3.32 to 7.11), shared (p<0.05; OR 20.50; 95% CI 13.02 to 32.26) and followed (p<0.05; OR 2.88; 95% CI 1.36 to 6.11) tobacco-related content on social media. Qualitative analysis resulted in emergent themes of smokers imitating tobacco-related photos or videos seen on social media and peers as an influence for smoking initiation.
This study suggests social media and social interactions may influence smoking behaviour in university students in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Future research should continue to investigate the roles social media and social interaction have on smoking in order to explore social media-based smoking cessation interventions or dissemination of smoking health hazards through social media.
在孟加拉国城市大学生中,确定社交媒体的使用和社交互动是否会影响吸烟者的几率。
社交媒体的使用和社交互动会影响孟加拉国大学生的吸烟行为,尤其是在开始和维持吸烟方面。
在孟加拉国达卡的两所公立大学和两所私立大学中,对 600 名学生吸烟者和非吸烟者进行了混合方法的横断面研究,这些学生来自一个资源有限的中低收入国家。排除标准是那些不使用任何形式的社交媒体和博士生的人。
与每天社交超过 4 小时的人相比,吸烟者的吸烟几率显著更高(p<0.05;OR 1.75;95% CI 1.12 至 2.75),而且通常在晚上(p<0.05;OR 2.80;95% CI 1.95 至 4.00)。那些喜欢(p<0.05;OR 4.85;95% CI 3.32 至 7.11)、分享(p<0.05;OR 20.50;95% CI 13.02 至 32.26)和关注(p<0.05;OR 2.88;95% CI 1.36 至 6.11)社交媒体上与烟草相关的内容的人,吸烟的几率也更高。定性分析得出的主题是吸烟者模仿社交媒体上看到的与烟草相关的照片或视频,以及同伴对吸烟的影响。
本研究表明,社交媒体和社交互动可能会影响孟加拉国达卡大学生的吸烟行为。未来的研究应该继续调查社交媒体和社交互动在吸烟方面的作用,以便探索基于社交媒体的戒烟干预措施,或通过社交媒体传播吸烟危害健康的信息。