Das Sagarika, Jena Pratap K, Satpathy Nancy, Kishore Jugal, Ak Kavitha, Epari Venkatarao, Gadtia Rashmirekha
Nursing, Shri Jagdishprasad Jhabarmal Tibrewala (JJT) University, Jhunjhunu, IND.
Mental Health Nursing, Central Institute of Psychiatry, Ranchi, IND.
Cureus. 2023 Dec 13;15(12):e50433. doi: 10.7759/cureus.50433. eCollection 2023 Dec.
Background and objective The heaviness of smoking index (HSI) is a popular tool to assess nicotine dependence in clinical and community settings. Low cigarette consumption and concurrent use of other tobacco products raise concerns about its validity in Indian settings. This study explores the performance of HSI in Indian settings. Methods This study analyzed daily manufactured cigarette smoker data from the cross-sectional Global Adult Tobacco Surveys (GATS) from its first (GAST-1, 2009) and second waves (GATS-2, 2016), both of which were available in the public domain. The HSI scores were calculated based on the number of cigarettes smoked per day (CPD) and time to first smoke (TTFS) after waking up among the current daily cigarette users. This study examined the utility of the HSI scale in Indian settings by estimating the predictability of low dependence on quit attempts and quit intentions using the likelihood ratio parameter. Results About nine in 10 cigarette users in India consumed less than 10 cigarettes per day, yielding a low score on the HSI scale for most of the daily cigarette users. The majority of daily cigarette smokers scored ≤ 1 (low dependence) on the HSI scale both in GATS-1 and GATS-2, irrespective of their exclusive cigarette use status. The absolute value and the 95% confidence limit of positive likelihood ratios (falling below and above one) suggest that the predictability of low dependence on quit attempts and quit intention in the Indian setting is limited. Conclusions The utility of the HSI scale in assessing nicotine dependence among cigarette users in India is limited. This may be attributed to low average cigarette consumption, concurrent use of various tobacco products, and the sociocultural milieu of Indian smokers. This highlights the need for a new rapid nicotine dependence scale tailored to the specific patterns of tobacco use behavior prevalent in the Indian context.
背景与目的 吸烟量指数(HSI)是临床和社区环境中评估尼古丁依赖的常用工具。低卷烟消费量以及同时使用其他烟草制品引发了对其在印度环境中有效性的担忧。本研究探讨了HSI在印度环境中的表现。方法 本研究分析了来自横断面全球成人烟草调查(GATS)第一波(GAST - 1,2009年)和第二波(GATS - 2,2016年)的每日制造卷烟吸烟者数据,这两波数据均为公开数据。HSI得分基于当前每日卷烟使用者每天吸烟支数(CPD)以及醒来后首次吸烟时间(TTFS)计算得出。本研究通过使用似然比参数估计低依赖对戒烟尝试和戒烟意愿的可预测性,来检验HSI量表在印度环境中的效用。结果 印度约十分之九的卷烟使用者每天吸食少于10支卷烟,这使得大多数每日卷烟使用者的HSI量表得分较低。在GATS - 1和GATS - 2中,大多数每日卷烟吸烟者无论其是否仅使用卷烟,HSI量表得分均≤1(低依赖)。阳性似然比的绝对值和95%置信限(低于和高于1)表明,在印度环境中,低依赖对戒烟尝试和戒烟意愿的可预测性有限。结论 HSI量表在评估印度卷烟使用者尼古丁依赖方面的效用有限。这可能归因于平均卷烟消费量低、同时使用各种烟草制品以及印度吸烟者的社会文化环境。这凸显了需要一种新的快速尼古丁依赖量表,该量表应根据印度背景中普遍存在的烟草使用行为特定模式量身定制。