Prevalence of cigarette smoking among young adults in Pakistan

To obtain information about the prevalence of cigarette smoking among a selected sample of university students in Karachi and build our understanding of the determinants of smoking with respect to family smoking, smoking in the home, smoke-free public places, and quit smoking cessation programmes. D...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association 2008-11, Vol.58 (11), p.597-601
Hauptverfasser: AHMED, Rashid, RIZWAN-UR-RASHID, MCDONALD, Paul W, WAJID AHMED, S
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container_end_page 601
container_issue 11
container_start_page 597
container_title Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association
container_volume 58
creator AHMED, Rashid
RIZWAN-UR-RASHID
MCDONALD, Paul W
WAJID AHMED, S
description To obtain information about the prevalence of cigarette smoking among a selected sample of university students in Karachi and build our understanding of the determinants of smoking with respect to family smoking, smoking in the home, smoke-free public places, and quit smoking cessation programmes. Data were collected as a part of a pilot project initiated by Jinnah University Karachi. Participants were 629 university students (432 males and 197 females) aged 18-25 years from ten universities in Karachi. Descriptive statistics and Logistic regression analyses were used to determine the results and conclusions. Thirty-nine per cent of students had smoked a whole cigarette in their life time, whereas 25% had smoked 100 or more cigarettes in their lifetime. Overall, 23% of students (31% male and 6% female) were classified as a current smoker and their mean age and standard deviation of smoking initiation was 17 +/- 2.7 years (17 +/- 2.6) for males and 16 +/- 2.9 females. Sixty-three percent of smokers reported that public places should be smoke-free. Logistic regression analyses adjusted by age and gender suggested that parental and sibling influence and number of close friends and individuals who smoke at home were highly predictive of being a smoker. Findings from this study suggest that student were generally open to smoking cessation treatment and no-smoking restrictions.
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source MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
General aspects
Humans
Logistic Models
Male
Medical sciences
Pakistan - epidemiology
Pilot Projects
Prevalence
Smoking - epidemiology
Tobacco, tobacco smoking
Toxicology
Young Adult
title Prevalence of cigarette smoking among young adults in Pakistan
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