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Is individual smoking behaviour influenced by area level ethnic density? A cross-sectional electronic health database study of inner south east London

Is individual smoking behaviour influenced by area level ethnic density? A cross-sectional electronic health database study of inner south east London
Is individual smoking behaviour influenced by area level ethnic density? A cross-sectional electronic health database study of inner south east London
Tobacco smoking remains one of the greatest public health problems facing the UK today. It varies significantly by ethnic group. This study aimed to¬¬¬ determine whether ethnic differences in smoking behaviour are related to neighbourhood level own-group ethnic density across south and east London.

The association between ethnic density and individual smoking behaviour was assessed by multilevel logistic regression using the electronic health records of 688,397 GP registered patients. Restricted cubic splines were created to explore whether the effect of ethnic density on smoking behaviour was non-linear.

Increasing own-group ethnic density was found to be associated with a significant reduction in the odds of being a current smoker in all ethnic groups, except for Caribbean women. The relationship between ethnic density and current smoking was found to be non-linear, with the strength of association varying significantly by gender and ethnic group.

These novel findings point to a complex relationship between culture, neighbourhood level experience of adversity or social support and smoking behaviour, and will allow us to target smoking cessation services differentially to individuals/groups living in relative ethnic isolation, who do not benefit from the potential cultural/social factors associated with reduced tobacco consumption.
Mathur, Rohini
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Schofield, Peter
e6753b1f-6dc5-48d7-8a4a-6fd761f22545
Smith, Dianna
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Gilkes, Alex
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White, Patrick
aa8d0bb0-0a13-4c57-8b3b-e8fa19b46b93
Hull, Sally
a87c6f6d-fa4b-4684-b09d-0a21ab5cbb4b
Mathur, Rohini
989febb1-9d36-4ce0-8690-3b163a385dd3
Schofield, Peter
e6753b1f-6dc5-48d7-8a4a-6fd761f22545
Smith, Dianna
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Gilkes, Alex
0f5828f0-e023-4c00-aaaf-d5faefc2d200
White, Patrick
aa8d0bb0-0a13-4c57-8b3b-e8fa19b46b93
Hull, Sally
a87c6f6d-fa4b-4684-b09d-0a21ab5cbb4b

Mathur, Rohini, Schofield, Peter, Smith, Dianna, Gilkes, Alex, White, Patrick and Hull, Sally (2017) Is individual smoking behaviour influenced by area level ethnic density? A cross-sectional electronic health database study of inner south east London. ERJ Open Research, 3 (1), [00130-2016]. (doi:10.1183/23120541.00130-2016).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Tobacco smoking remains one of the greatest public health problems facing the UK today. It varies significantly by ethnic group. This study aimed to¬¬¬ determine whether ethnic differences in smoking behaviour are related to neighbourhood level own-group ethnic density across south and east London.

The association between ethnic density and individual smoking behaviour was assessed by multilevel logistic regression using the electronic health records of 688,397 GP registered patients. Restricted cubic splines were created to explore whether the effect of ethnic density on smoking behaviour was non-linear.

Increasing own-group ethnic density was found to be associated with a significant reduction in the odds of being a current smoker in all ethnic groups, except for Caribbean women. The relationship between ethnic density and current smoking was found to be non-linear, with the strength of association varying significantly by gender and ethnic group.

These novel findings point to a complex relationship between culture, neighbourhood level experience of adversity or social support and smoking behaviour, and will allow us to target smoking cessation services differentially to individuals/groups living in relative ethnic isolation, who do not benefit from the potential cultural/social factors associated with reduced tobacco consumption.

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ERJOpen_Mathuretal_2017 - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 January 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 March 2017
Organisations: Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 406937
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406937
PURE UUID: ef59a981-b4ab-4fa9-8630-3ba5c5e9104c
ORCID for Dianna Smith: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0650-6606

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Date deposited: 28 Mar 2017 01:07
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:23

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Contributors

Author: Rohini Mathur
Author: Peter Schofield
Author: Dianna Smith ORCID iD
Author: Alex Gilkes
Author: Patrick White
Author: Sally Hull

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