Smoking Among Nurses in Turkey: Comparison with Other Countries
The purpose of this study was to obtain baseline information on smoking among nurses. An attempt was made to contact, in person, all 301 nurses working for the university hospital in Sivas, Turkey, and when contacted they were asked to complete an anonymous questionnaire. Each unit of the hospital w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of health, population and nutrition population and nutrition, 2007-03, Vol.25 (1), p.107-111 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The purpose of this study was to obtain baseline information on smoking
among nurses. An attempt was made to contact, in person, all 301 nurses
working for the university hospital in Sivas, Turkey, and when
contacted they were asked to complete an anonymous questionnaire. Each
unit of the hospital was visited three times, and 239 (79%) nurses were
reached who all completed the questionnaire. Of the 239 respondents,
107 (45%) were current smokers, reflecting a substantially higher
prevalence compared to that among the adult female population. The quit
ratio was 22.5%. Of 127 ever-smoker nurses who responded to the related
item, 90% started smoking during or after nursing education. This
pattern of smoking initiation was different from the pattern in
developed countries where nurses had already started smoking before
beginning that training. Nurses with a high school education had a
signi-ficantly higher prevalence of ever-smoking. Most respondents
frequently or sometimes saw doctors smoking in rooms for nurses and in
rooms for doctors in inpatient services. In-depth qualitative studies
are needed to determine the reasons for the different
smoking-initiation pattern. |
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ISSN: | 1606-0997 2072-1315 |