| Literature DB >> 30368451 |
Chloe Fawns-Ritchie1,2, John M Starr1,3, Ian J Deary1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We used logistic regression to investigate whether health literacy and cognitive ability independently predicted whether participants have ever smoked and, in ever smokers, whether participants still smoked nowadays.Entities:
Keywords: epidemiology; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30368451 PMCID: PMC6224719 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Participant characteristics according to smoking status (n=8734)*
| Smoking history | Smoking cessation† | |||||
| Ever smoker | Never smoker (n=3209) | P values for difference | Current smoker | Former smoker | P values for difference | |
| Health literacy, n (%) | 0.001 | <0.001 | ||||
| Adequate | 3647 (66.0) | 2233 (69.6) | 840 (61.9) | 2807 (67.3) | ||
| Limited | 1878 (34.0) | 976 (30.4) | 516 (38.1) | 1362 (32.7) | ||
| General cognitive ability, mean (SD) | −0.04 (1.00) | 0.08 (0.99) | <0.001 | −0.02 (0.99) | −0.05 (1.01) | 0.385 |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 65.53 (10.13) | 64.93 (10.24) | 0.005 | 62.12 (9.12) | 66.64 (10.20) | <0.001 |
| Sex, n (%) | 0.001 | <0.001 | ||||
| Female | 2752 (49.8) | 2172 (67.7) | 761 (56.1) | 1991 (47.8) | ||
| Male | 2773 (50.2) | 1037 (32.3) | 595 (43.9) | 2178 (52.2) | ||
| Age left full-time education, n (%) | <0.001 | <0.001 | ||||
| 14 years or under | 1104 (20.6) | 553 (17.6) | 233 (17.7) | 871 (21.5) | ||
| 15–16 years | 2936 (54.8) | 1578 (50.2) | 856 (65.0) | 2080 (51.4) | ||
| 17–18 years | 665 (12.4) | 488 (15.5) | 128 (9.7) | 537 (13.3) | ||
| 19 years or over | 657 (12.3) | 526 (16.7) | 99 (7.5) | 558 (13.8) | ||
| Occupational social class, n (%) | <0.001 | <0.001 | ||||
| Managerial and professional | 1677 (30.8) | 1047 (33.2) | 274 (20.6) | 1403 (34.2) | ||
| Intermediate | 1263 (23.2) | 884 (28.1) | 312 (23.4) | 951 (23.2) | ||
| Routine and manual | 2499 (45.9) | 1218 (38.7) | 747 (56.0) | 1752 (42.7) | ||
*Characteristics for age left full-time education are based on a subset of 8507 participants with this data and characteristics for occupational social class are based on a subset of 8588 participants with this data.
†For smoking cessation comparisons, the ever smoker category is divided into whether ever smokers are current or former smokers.
Rank-order correlations between predictor variables (pairwise n=8367–8734)
| Health literacy | General cognitive ability | Age (years) | Sex | Education | Occupational class | |
| Health literacy | – | |||||
| General cognitive ability | 0.31*** | – | ||||
| Age (years) | −0.16*** | −0.46*** | – | |||
| Sex | 0.01 | −0.10*** | 0.02* | – | ||
| Education | 0.23*** | 0.38*** | −0.40*** | 0.00 | – | |
| Occupational class | −0.18*** | −0.25*** | 0.07*** | −0.09*** | −0.41*** | – |
*p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.
Health literacy was coded 0 for inadequate health literacy, 1 for adequate health literacy; sex was coded 0 for women, 1 for men; education is age left full-time education and was coded 1 for 14 years or under, 2 for 15–16 years, 3 for 17–18 years, 4 for 19 years or older; occupational social class was coded 1 for managerial and professional, 2 for intermediate, 3 for routine and manual.
ORs and 95% CIs from logistic regression models of whether participants have ever smoked
| Model 1 (n=8734) | Model 2 (n=8734) | Model 3 (n=8734) | Model 4 (n=8367) | |
| Health literacy | ||||
| Adequate | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Limited | 1.174 (1.067 to 1.293)** | – | 1.134 (1.026 to 1.254)* | 1.096 (0.988 to 1.216) |
| General cognitive ability† | – | 0.919 (0.874 to 0.967)** | 0.936 (0.888 to 0.987)* | 1.000 (0.945 to 1.057) |
| Age (years) | 1.004 (1.000 to 1.008) | 1.001 (0.996 to 1.006) | 1.001 (0.996 to 1.006) | 1.002 (0.996 to 1.007) |
| Sex | ||||
| Female | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Male | 2.112 (1.929 to 2.313)*** | 2.077 (1.896 to 2.276)*** | 2.087 (1.905 to 2.288)*** | 2.150 (1.955 to 2.366)*** |
| Age left full-time education | ||||
| 14 years or under | – | – | – | Reference |
| 15–16 years | – | – | – | 1.016 (0.880 to 1.172) |
| 17–18 years | – | – | – | 0.828 (0.690 to 0.994)* |
| 19 years or older | – | – | – | 0.693 (0.572 to 0.839)*** |
| Occupational class | ||||
| Managerial and professional | – | – | – | Reference |
| Intermediate | – | – | – | 0.919 (0.810 to 1.041) |
| Routine and manual | – | – | – | 1.204 (1.066 to 1.360)** |
*p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.
†ORs (95% CIs) for general cognitive ability are the odds of reporting ever smoking for a 1 SD increase in general cognitive ability.
ORs and 95% CIs from logistic regression models of whether ever smokers still smoke nowadays
| Model 1 (n=5525) | Model 2 (n=5525) | Model 3 (n=5525) | Model 4 (n=5280) | |
| Health literacy | ||||
| Adequate | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Limited | 1.493 (1.307 to 1.704)*** | – | 1.338 (1.165 to 1.536)*** | 1.194 (1.034 to 1.378)* |
| General cognitive ability† | – | 0.772 (0.718 to 0.829)*** | 0.805 (0.747 to 0.868)*** | 0.878 (0.810 to 0.951)** |
| Age | 0.952 (0.945 to 0.958)*** | 0.943 (0.936 to 0.951)*** | 0.943 (0.936 to 0.950)*** | 0.938 (0.929 to 0.947)*** |
| Age2 | 0.999 (0.999 to 1.000)** | 0.999 (0.999 to 1.000)** | 0.999 (0.999 to 1.000)** | 0.999 (0.998 to 1.000)** |
| Sex | ||||
| Female | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Male | 0.744 (0.655 to 0.845)*** | 0.707 (0.622 to 0.803)*** | 0.714 (0.628 to 0.811)*** | 0.755 (0.661 to 0.863)*** |
| Age left full-time education | ||||
| 14 years or under | – | – | – | Reference |
| 15–16 years | – | – | – | 0.734 (0.593 to 0.908)** |
| 17–18 years | – | – | – | 0.515 (0.384 to 0.687)*** |
| 19 years or older | – | – | – | 0.432 (0.308 to 0.578)*** |
| Occupational class | ||||
| Managerial and professional | – | – | – | Reference |
| Intermediate | – | – | – | 1.390 (1.144 to 1.689)*** |
| Routine and manual | – | – | – | 1.614 (1.375 to 1.961)*** |
*p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001.
†ORs (95% CI) for general cognitive ability are the odds of reporting being a current smoker for a 1 SD increase in general cognitive ability.
Age 2, Age squared.