Divergent socioeconomic gradients in smoking by type of tobacco use in India
We describe the relationship between socio-economic status and current bidi or cigarette smoking among Indian men aged ?15 years. The prevalence of bidi smoking was 13.7% (95%CI 13.3?14.1) and that of cigarette smoking was 6.3% (95%CI 6.1?6.6). bidi smoking was concentrated among the socio-economically disadvantaged, while cigarette smoking was common among men with higher status occupations and greater levels of education and household wealth. This suggests that India has not transitioned to the later stages of the tobacco epidemic, and underscores the need for prevention and control strategies adapted to current patterns of consumption across socio-economic groups in India.
Authors: | Corsi, Daniel J ; Subramanian, S V |
---|---|
Institutions: | Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Corsi, Daniel J,
-
Revisiting the discourse on accomplishing MDG-4.
Corsi, Daniel J,
-
Corsi, Daniel J, (2015)
- More ...