| Literature DB >> 21981754 |
Tessa E Langley1, Lisa C Szatkowski, Stephen Wythe, Sarah A Lewis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accurate and timely regional data on smoking trends allow tobacco control interventions to be targeted at the areas most in need and facilitate the evaluation of such interventions. Electronic primary care databases have the potential to provide a valuable source of such data due to their size, continuity and the availability of socio-demographic data. UK electronic primary care data on smoking prevalence from The Health Improvement Network (THIN) have previously been validated at the national level, but may be less representative at the regional level due to reduced sample sizes. We investigated whether this database provides valid regional data and whether it can be used to compare smoking prevalence in different UK regions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21981754 PMCID: PMC3198710 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Sample sizes of General Lifestyle Survey and THIN, 2000 and 2008
| GLF 2000 | THIN 2000 | GLF 2008 | THIN 2008 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North East | 686 | 99,054 | 642 | 109,322 |
| North West | 1,701 | 286,949 | 1,691 | 316,195 |
| Yorks And Humber | 1,253 | 136,982 | 1,370 | 144,646 |
| East Midlands | 997 | 130,418 | 1,222 | 140,882 |
| West Midlands | 1,300 | 285,633 | 1,354 | 317,585 |
| East Of England | 1,348 | 222,265 | 1,497 | 243,355 |
| London | 1,504 | 293,421 | 1,207 | 338,859 |
| South East | 2,062 | 525,110 | 2,082 | 704,886 |
| South West | 1,303 | 290,763 | 1,420 | 350,742 |
| Wales | 724 | 141,372 | 830 | 210,585 |
| Scotland | 1,211 | 198,045 | 1,304 | 250,109 |
Figure 1Smoking prevalence by region from THIN and GLF (2000-2008). Solid line: GLF Dashed line: THIN