| Literature DB >> 16696858 |
Michael C Costanza1, Julien Salamun, Alan D Lopez, Alfredo Morabia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Describe the recent evolution of cigarette smoking habits by gender in Geneva, where incidence rates of lung cancer have been declining in men but increasing in women.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16696858 PMCID: PMC1479327 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-6-130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Recent trends in current smoking by gender in various European populations. Countries are listed alphabetically within subgroups sorted by trend direction in women (increasing (↑), stable (↔), decreasing (↓)).
| [Reference] | ||||||
| Austria | 1986 | ↑ | 35% | ↑ | 18% | [1] |
| Belgium | 1985/87 | slight ↓ | 51% | ↑ | 24% | [2] |
| Finland | 1982 | ↓ | 34% | ↑ | 10% | [2] |
| Finland | 1982 | ↓ | 30% | ↑ | 9% | [2] |
| France | 1974 | ↓ | 59% | ↑ | 28% | [3] |
| Germany | 1985 | ↓ | 36% | ↑ | 19% | [4] |
| Germany | 1990/92 | ↔ | No change | ↑ | 21% | [5] |
| Germany | 1985 | ↓ | no data | ↑ | no data | [6] |
| Italy | 1980 | ↓ | 60% | ↑ | 18% | [7] |
| Lithuania | 1983/85 | ↔ | 38.3% | ↑ | 4.1% | [8] |
| Poland | 1983/84 | ↓ | 58% | ↑ | 11% | [2] |
| Russia | 1985/86 | slight ↓ | 61% | ↑ | 4% | [2] |
| Spain | 1986/88 | ↓ | 52% | ↑ | 15% | [9] |
| Spain | 1982 | ↓ | 58% | ↑ | 20% | [10] |
| Switzerland | 1992/93 | ↑ | 37% | ↑ | 24% | [11] |
| Yugoslavia | 1984 | ↑ | 48% | ↑ | 26% | [2] |
| France | 1985 | ↓ | 37% | ↔ | 19% | [12] |
| Czech Republic | 1985 | ↓ | 49% | ↔/slight ↓ | 28% | [13] |
| Belgium | 1963 | ↓ | ~70 | slight ↓ | ~25 | [14] |
| Denmark | 1964/74 | ↓ | 72% | ↓ | 52% | [15] |
| Iceland | 1983 | ↓ | 27% | ↓ | 40% | [2] |
| Ireland | 1983 | ↓ | ~70 | ↓ | ~40 | [14] |
| New-Zealand | 1982 | ↓ | 29% | ↓ | 25% | [2] |
| Sweden | 1985/86 | ↓ | 32% | ↓ | 34% | [2] |
Figure 111-year trends in cigarette smoking habits by gender in Geneva, Switzerland, 1993–2003. All estimates based on analyses of individual-level data (6,164 men, 6,107 women). Symbols connected by piece-wise line segments: least squares means; bold solid lines: linear regressions; dashed curves: confidence bands (CB). Top panels: prevalence of current, former, and never cigarette smoking (95% CB's adjusted for six models). Bottom panels: age at smoking initiation for current and former cigarette smokers (95% CB's adjusted for four models).
Figure 2Cigarette smoking habits across five-year age subgroups by gender in Geneva, Switzerland, 1993–2003. All estimates based on analyses of individual-level data (6,164 men, 6,107 women). Bar heights: prevalences; symbols connected by piece-wise line segments: least squares means; bold solid lines: linear regressions; dashed curves: confidence bands (CB). Top panels: prevalence of current, former, and never cigarette smoking. Bottom panels: age at smoking initiation for current and former cigarette smokers (95% CB's adjusted for four models).