| Literature DB >> 35586175 |
Johannes Zeiher1, Anne Starker1, Benjamin Kuntz1.
Abstract
Smoking behaviour during adolescence is particularly important because the pattern of a person's tobacco consumption in later life usually is established in this period. According to recent data from KiGGS Wave 2, 7.4% of 11 to 17 year-old girls and 7.0% of boys of the same age smoke at least occasionally. The proportion of children and adolescents who smoke increases with age. Adolescents with high socioeconomic status smoke less frequently than their peers with medium or low socioeconomic status. Since the beginning of the first KiGGS study (2003-2006), the proportion of 11 to 17 year-olds who smoke fell from 21.4% to 12.4% (2009-2012) and has recently dropped to 7.2% (2014-2017). Despite considerable progress, however, there is still potential to improve tobacco prevention policy in Germany for example using taxation and advertising bans. © Robert Koch Institute. All rights reserved unless explicitly granted.Entities:
Keywords: CIGARETTES; HEALTH MONITORING; KIGGS; SMOKING; TOBACCO USE
Year: 2018 PMID: 35586175 PMCID: PMC8848845 DOI: 10.17886/RKI-GBE-2018-025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Monit ISSN: 2511-2708
Prevalence of current and daily smoking according to gender, age and socioeconomic status (n=2,996 girls, n=2,751 boys)
Source: KiGGS Wave 2 (2014-2017)
| Current smoking (daily or occasionally) | Daily smoking | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | (95% CI) | % | (95% CI) | |
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| 11-13 Years | 0.6 | (0.2-1.6) | 0.1 | (0.0-0.4) |
| 14-17 Years | 11.9 | (9.9-14.2) | 5.9 | (4.6-7.6) |
| | ||||
| Low | 9.2 | (6.0-13.9) | 5.8 | (3.5-9.3) |
| Medium | 7.6 | (6.2-9.4) | 3.4 | (2.5-4.7) |
| High | 4.3 | (2.6-7.0) | 1.5 | (0.7-3.0) |
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| 11-13 Years | 0.9 | (0.3-2.8) | 0.5 | (0.1-3.4) |
| 14-17 Years | 11.1 | (9.4-13.0) | 6.1 | (4.7-8.0) |
| | ||||
| Low | 6.7 | (4.2-10.4) | 2.7 | (1.3-5.3) |
| Medium | 8.2 | (6.7-10.1) | 4.9 | (3.6-6.7) |
| High | 3.7 | (2.3-5.9) | 1.9 | (0.9-3.6) |
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CI=confidence interval
Figure 1Trends in current smoking among 11 to 17 year-old girls and boys (KiGGS baseline study n=6,729, KiGGS Wave 1 n=4,944, KiGGS Wave 2 n=5,747)
Source: KiGGS baseline study (2003-2006), KiGGS Wave 1 (2009-2012), KiGGS Wave 2 (2014-2017)