Literature DB >> 15923442

Uncovering the relation between betel quid chewing and cigarette smoking in Taiwan.

C P Wen1, S P Tsai, T Y Cheng, C-J Chen, D T Levy, H-J Yang, M P Eriksen.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the characteristics of betel quid chewers and to investigate the behavioural and mortality relations between betel quid chewing and cigarette smoking.
METHOD: Prevalence and mortality risks of betel quid chewers by smoking status were calculated, based on the National Health Interview Survey in 2001 and a community based cohort, respectively. Cox's proportional hazards model was used to adjust mortality risks for age, alcohol use, and education.
RESULTS: Almost all betel quid chewers were smokers, and most started chewing after smoking. Chewers were predominantly male, mostly in their 30s and 40s, more likely being among the lowest educational or income group, and residing in the eastern regions of Taiwan. On average, betel quid chewers who smoked consumed 18 pieces of betel quid a day, and smoked more cigarettes per day. Far more smokers use betel quid than non-smokers (27.5% v 2.5%), but ex-smokers quit betel quid more than smokers (15.1% v 6.8%). The significantly increased mortality of betel quid users who also smoked, for all causes, all cancer, oral cancer, and cancer of the nasopharynx, lung, and liver, was the result of the combined effects of chewing and smoking. Smokers who chewed betel quid nearly tripled their oral cancer risks from a relative risk of 2.1 to 5.9. Increasing the number of cigarettes smoked among betel quid chewers was associated with a synergistic effect, reflective of the significant interaction between the two.
CONCLUSION: To a large extent, the serious health consequences suffered by betel quid chewers were the result of the combined effects of smoking and chewing. Betel quid chewing should not be considered as an isolated issue, but should be viewed conjointly with cigarette smoking. Reducing cigarette smoking serves as an important first step in reducing betel quid chewing, and incorporating betel quid control into tobacco control may provide a new paradigm to attenuate the explosive increase in betel quid use in Taiwan.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15923442      PMCID: PMC1766184          DOI: 10.1136/tc.2004.008003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tob Control        ISSN: 0964-4563            Impact factor:   7.552


  27 in total

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5.  Cardiovascular responses to betel chewing.

Authors:  N S Chu
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6.  Prevalence and related risk factors of betel quid chewing by adolescent students in southern Taiwan.

Authors:  M S Yang; I H Su; J K Wen; Y C Ko
Journal:  J Oral Pathol Med       Date:  1996-02       Impact factor: 4.253

7.  Prevalence and characteristics of areca nut chewers among junior high school students in Changhua county, Taiwan.

Authors:  C T Lu; S J Lan; C C Hsieh; M J Yang; Y C Ko; C C Tsai; Y Y Yen
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8.  Betel quid chewing, cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption related to oral cancer in Taiwan.

Authors:  Y C Ko; Y L Huang; C H Lee; M J Chen; L M Lin; C C Tsai
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9.  Prevalence of betel quid chewing habit in Taiwan and related sociodemographic factors.

Authors:  Y C Ko; T A Chiang; S J Chang; S F Hsieh
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10.  Habitual betel quid chewing as a risk factor for cirrhosis: a case-control study.

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Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 1.889

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  42 in total

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3.  Increasing taxes to reduce smoking prevalence and smoking attributable mortality in Taiwan: results from a tobacco policy simulation model.

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4.  The health benefits of smoking cessation for adult smokers and for pregnant women in Taiwan.

Authors:  C P Wen; T Y Cheng; C-L Lin; H-N Wu; D T Levy; L-K Chen; C-C Hsu; M P Eriksen; H-J Yang; S P Tsai
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5.  Paradoxical increase in cigarette smuggling after the market opening in Taiwan.

Authors:  C P Wen; R A Peterson; T Y D Cheng; S P Tsai; M P Eriksen; T Chen
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6.  Smoking-related deaths averted due to three years of policy progress.

Authors:  David T Levy; Jennifer A Ellis; Darren Mays; An-Tsun Huang
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7.  The association of smoking, alcoholic consumption, betel quid chewing and oral cavity cancer: a cohort study.

Authors:  Tin-Tin Yen; Whe-Dar Lin; Ching-Ping Wang; Chen-Chi Wang; Shih-An Liu
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2008-04-04       Impact factor: 2.503

8.  Running away experience and psychoactive substance use among adolescents in Taiwan: multi-city street outreach survey.

Authors:  Shi-Heng Wang; Wen-Chun Chen; Chih-Yin Lew-Ting; Chuan-Yu Chen; Wei J Chen
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9.  Incidence of oral cancer in relation to nickel and arsenic concentrations in farm soils of patients' residential areas in Taiwan.

Authors:  Che-Chun Su; Yo-Yu Lin; Tsun-Kuo Chang; Chi-Ting Chiang; Jian-An Chung; Yun-Ying Hsu; Ie-Bin Lian
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10.  Spatiotemporal trends in oral cancer mortality and potential risks associated with heavy metal content in Taiwan soil.

Authors:  Chi-Ting Chiang; Ie-Bin Lian; Che-Chun Su; Kuo-Yang Tsai; Yu-Pin Lin; Tsun-Kuo Chang
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