| Literature DB >> 28553727 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Despite reductions in prevalence in recent years, tobacco smoking remains one of the main preventable causes of ill-health and premature death worldwide. This paper reviews the extent and nature of harms caused by smoking, the benefits of stopping, patterns of smoking, psychological, pharmacological and social factors that contribute to uptake and maintenance of smoking, the effectiveness of population and individual level interventions aimed at combatting tobacco smoking, and the effectiveness of methods used to reduce the harm caused by continued use of tobacco or nicotine in some form. RESULTS ANDEntities:
Keywords: addiction; smoking; tobacco
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28553727 PMCID: PMC5490618 DOI: 10.1080/08870446.2017.1325890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Health ISSN: 0887-0446
Main causes of death from tobacco smoking and benefits of stopping.
| Cause of death from smoking | Benefit of stopping smoking |
|---|---|
| Coronary heart disease and stroke | Preventable if cessation occurs in early adulthood; at least partially reversible thereafter |
| Cancers of the lung and upper airways | Preventable if cessation occurs in early adulthood; further increase in risk prevented thereafter |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | Preventable if cessation occurs in early adulthood; further decline in lung function slowed thereafter |
| Miscarriage and underdevelopment of foetus | Preventable if cessation occurs early in pregnancy; risk is mitigated by stopping at any time in pregnancy |
Estimates of tobacco smoking prevalence in world regions.
| Region | Male prevalence % | Female prevalence % | Overall prevalence % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Africa | 23 | 3 | 13 |
| Caribbean Central and Northern America | 20 | 4 | 13 |
| South America | 30 | 15 | 21 |
| Central Southern and Western Asia | 37 | 4 | 23 |
| Eastern and South-eastern Asia | 45 | 4 | 24 |
| Eastern Europe | 42 | 22 | 31 |
| Northern Europe | 28 | 22 | 27 |
| Southern Europe | 35 | 24 | 28 |
| Western Europe | 33 | 24 | 29 |
| Oceania | 43 | 19 | 30 |
| World | 32 | 7 | 23 |
Note: Current smoking of any tobacco product, adults aged 15 years and older, age-standardised rate, by gender. ‘Tobacco smoking’ includes cigarettes, cigars, pipes or any other smoked tobacco products. ‘Current smoking’ includes both daily and non-daily or occasional smoking. From Gowing et al. (2015).
Figure 1.Factors associated with transitions in the natural history of smoking (parentheses indicate negative associations).
Effective interventions for combating smoking.
| Intervention | Effectiveness |
|---|---|
| Increasing the financial cost through increasing excise duty and reducing illicit supply | 1–2 percentage point reduction in prevalence for 10% increase in cost of smoking; increases cessation and reduces initiation |
| Anti-tobacco marketing campaigns | Effect on cessation and initiation varies with content and intensity of campaigns |
| Brief physician advice to smokers | 1–3 percentage point increase in long-term smoking cessation rate in all those receiving it regardless of initial motivation to quit |
| Prescription for varenicline, nicotine replacement therapy, bupropion, nortriptyline or cytisine | 5–15 percentage point increase in quit success in those using it to try to quit (highest with varenicline and nicotine patches plus faster acting nicotine replacement therapy) |
| Behavioural support, either face to face or by telephone | 3–10 percentage point increase in long-term quit success among those using it to try to quit for multi-session support delivered by trained specialists, the effect apparently being additive with pharmacotherapy |
| Printed self-help materials | 1–2 percentage point increase in long-term quit success in those using it to try to quit compared with nothing |
| Peer-led school-based anti-smoking programmes and social competence training | Reduction in youth uptake varies with content and intensity of the programme |