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The social patterning of tobacco use among women in Jordan: the protective effect of education on cigarette smoking and the deleterious effect of wealth on cigarette and waterpipe smoking

The social patterning of tobacco use among women in Jordan: the protective effect of education on cigarette smoking and the deleterious effect of wealth on cigarette and waterpipe smoking
The social patterning of tobacco use among women in Jordan: the protective effect of education on cigarette smoking and the deleterious effect of wealth on cigarette and waterpipe smoking
Introduction: The presence of social inequalities in tobacco-use has been fully recognized in the international literature. Even though cigarette and waterpipe tobacco smoking (WTS) are prevalent in the Arab region, the literature has not addressed the social determinants of the impending tobacco epidemic. This study examined the socioeconomic patterning of cigarette and WTS among Jordanian women.

Methods: We analyzed pooled data from four waves of the Jordan Demographic and Health Surveys: 2002 (N = 5851); 2007 (N = 10 654); 2009 (N = 9879), and 2012 (N = 11 113). We specified logistic regression models to test the association between education and household wealth and the two outcome measures, cigarette and WTS, adjusting for other covariates. For each outcome, we ran time-unadjusted and time-adjusted logistic models.

Results: Cigarette smoking prevalence among Jordanian women remained almost constant (around 10%) between 2002 and 2012. WTS prevalence steadily increased from 4.1% in 2002 to 10.2% in 2012. Increasing education predicted lower odds of cigarette smoking, whereas increasing household wealth weakly predicted higher odds. As to WTS, increasing household wealth strongly predicted higher odds of use.

Conclusions: Among Jordanian women, increasing education is protective against cigarette smoking. Household wealth, on the other hand, exerts a deleterious effect on both forms of tobacco consumption, particularly WTS. This pattern shows that Jordan has not fully undergone the socioeconomic crossover in tobacco prevalence which characterizes high-income countries. Future control policies should aim to decrease prevalence but also preempt increasing social inequalities in tobacco use.
1462-2203
1-7
Jawad, Mohammed
2f8ebb89-4b95-4436-8e37-42fe1ddcb02e
Abdulrahim, Sawsan
99643388-56c8-40ef-8d51-5f3af0f10234
Daouk, Aref
d6ccc0d1-c531-4901-8a26-07194429edf0
Jawad, Mohammed
2f8ebb89-4b95-4436-8e37-42fe1ddcb02e
Abdulrahim, Sawsan
99643388-56c8-40ef-8d51-5f3af0f10234
Daouk, Aref
d6ccc0d1-c531-4901-8a26-07194429edf0

Jawad, Mohammed, Abdulrahim, Sawsan and Daouk, Aref (2015) The social patterning of tobacco use among women in Jordan: the protective effect of education on cigarette smoking and the deleterious effect of wealth on cigarette and waterpipe smoking. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 1-7. (doi:10.1093/ntr/ntv111). (PMID:26014452)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: The presence of social inequalities in tobacco-use has been fully recognized in the international literature. Even though cigarette and waterpipe tobacco smoking (WTS) are prevalent in the Arab region, the literature has not addressed the social determinants of the impending tobacco epidemic. This study examined the socioeconomic patterning of cigarette and WTS among Jordanian women.

Methods: We analyzed pooled data from four waves of the Jordan Demographic and Health Surveys: 2002 (N = 5851); 2007 (N = 10 654); 2009 (N = 9879), and 2012 (N = 11 113). We specified logistic regression models to test the association between education and household wealth and the two outcome measures, cigarette and WTS, adjusting for other covariates. For each outcome, we ran time-unadjusted and time-adjusted logistic models.

Results: Cigarette smoking prevalence among Jordanian women remained almost constant (around 10%) between 2002 and 2012. WTS prevalence steadily increased from 4.1% in 2002 to 10.2% in 2012. Increasing education predicted lower odds of cigarette smoking, whereas increasing household wealth weakly predicted higher odds. As to WTS, increasing household wealth strongly predicted higher odds of use.

Conclusions: Among Jordanian women, increasing education is protective against cigarette smoking. Household wealth, on the other hand, exerts a deleterious effect on both forms of tobacco consumption, particularly WTS. This pattern shows that Jordan has not fully undergone the socioeconomic crossover in tobacco prevalence which characterizes high-income countries. Future control policies should aim to decrease prevalence but also preempt increasing social inequalities in tobacco use.

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Nicotine Tob Res-2015-Jawad-ntr-ntv111.pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 13 May 2015
Published date: 25 May 2015
Organisations: Primary Care & Population Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 378606
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378606
ISSN: 1462-2203
PURE UUID: ad5df818-24c1-481e-a9d5-31d73c4ed97b

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Date deposited: 01 Jul 2015 14:36
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:25

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Contributors

Author: Mohammed Jawad
Author: Sawsan Abdulrahim
Author: Aref Daouk

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