The role of tobacco and alcohol use in the interaction of social determinants of non-communicable diseases in Nepal: a systems perspective
The role of tobacco and alcohol use in the interaction of social determinants of non-communicable diseases in Nepal: a systems perspective
Background: tobacco and alcohol use are major behavioural risks in developing countries like Nepal, which are contributing to a rapid increase in non-communicable diseases (NCDs). This causal relationship is further complicated by the multi-level social determinants such as socio-political context, socio-economic factors and health systems. The systems approach has potential to facilitate understanding of such complex causal mechanisms. The objective of this paper is to describe the role of tobacco and alcohol use in the interaction of social determinants of NCDs in Nepal.
Method: the study adopted a qualitative study design guided by the Systemic Intervention methodology. The study involved key informant interviews (n = 63) and focus group discussions (n = 12) at different levels (national, district and/or community) and was informed by the adapted Social Determinants of Health Framework. The data analysis involved case study-based thematic analysis using framework approach and development of causal loop diagrams. The study also involved three sense-making sessions with key stakeholders.
Results: three key themes and causal loop diagrams emerged from the data analysis. Widespread availability of tobacco and alcohol products contributed to the use and addiction of tobacco and alcohol. Low focus on primary prevention by health systems and political influence of tobacco and alcohol industries were the major contributors to the problem. Gender and socio-economic status of families/communities were identified as key social determinants of tobacco and alcohol use.
Conclusion: tobacco and alcohol use facilitated interaction of the social determinants of NCDs in the context of Nepal. Socio-economic status of families was both driver and outcome of tobacco and alcohol use. Health system actions to prevent NCDs were delayed mainly due to lack of system insights and commercial influence. A multi-sectoral response led by the health system is urgently needed.
Sharma, Sudesh Raj
f276c3fd-6b0e-4b1d-a1ec-b7a5790236ec
Matheson, Anna
2133f82f-b99f-4e23-8325-5915478c127d
Lambrick, Danielle
1deafa4b-acf3-4eff-83c9-f8274e47e993
Faulkner, James
2bc6c985-dee9-4c5e-9798-c616b8eefdd7
Lounsbury, David W.
e513dbbd-5484-42e8-ae29-f3a0067f9cf2
Vaidya, Abhinav
e8484453-377f-49c8-8621-bbc1e4f2bbb9
Page, Rachel
6e7cbe74-9f19-45b8-959d-b32f8ac41d69
Sharma, Sudesh Raj
f276c3fd-6b0e-4b1d-a1ec-b7a5790236ec
Matheson, Anna
2133f82f-b99f-4e23-8325-5915478c127d
Lambrick, Danielle
1deafa4b-acf3-4eff-83c9-f8274e47e993
Faulkner, James
2bc6c985-dee9-4c5e-9798-c616b8eefdd7
Lounsbury, David W.
e513dbbd-5484-42e8-ae29-f3a0067f9cf2
Vaidya, Abhinav
e8484453-377f-49c8-8621-bbc1e4f2bbb9
Page, Rachel
6e7cbe74-9f19-45b8-959d-b32f8ac41d69
Sharma, Sudesh Raj, Matheson, Anna, Lambrick, Danielle, Faulkner, James, Lounsbury, David W., Vaidya, Abhinav and Page, Rachel
(2020)
The role of tobacco and alcohol use in the interaction of social determinants of non-communicable diseases in Nepal: a systems perspective.
BMC Public Health, 20 (1).
(doi:10.1186/s12889-020-09446-2).
Abstract
Background: tobacco and alcohol use are major behavioural risks in developing countries like Nepal, which are contributing to a rapid increase in non-communicable diseases (NCDs). This causal relationship is further complicated by the multi-level social determinants such as socio-political context, socio-economic factors and health systems. The systems approach has potential to facilitate understanding of such complex causal mechanisms. The objective of this paper is to describe the role of tobacco and alcohol use in the interaction of social determinants of NCDs in Nepal.
Method: the study adopted a qualitative study design guided by the Systemic Intervention methodology. The study involved key informant interviews (n = 63) and focus group discussions (n = 12) at different levels (national, district and/or community) and was informed by the adapted Social Determinants of Health Framework. The data analysis involved case study-based thematic analysis using framework approach and development of causal loop diagrams. The study also involved three sense-making sessions with key stakeholders.
Results: three key themes and causal loop diagrams emerged from the data analysis. Widespread availability of tobacco and alcohol products contributed to the use and addiction of tobacco and alcohol. Low focus on primary prevention by health systems and political influence of tobacco and alcohol industries were the major contributors to the problem. Gender and socio-economic status of families/communities were identified as key social determinants of tobacco and alcohol use.
Conclusion: tobacco and alcohol use facilitated interaction of the social determinants of NCDs in the context of Nepal. Socio-economic status of families was both driver and outcome of tobacco and alcohol use. Health system actions to prevent NCDs were delayed mainly due to lack of system insights and commercial influence. A multi-sectoral response led by the health system is urgently needed.
Text
s12889-020-09446-2
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 25 August 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 September 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 449276
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/449276
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: b30feb50-5ef9-49c1-bb54-e2dd2bbb99b6
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 21 May 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:37
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Sudesh Raj Sharma
Author:
Anna Matheson
Author:
James Faulkner
Author:
David W. Lounsbury
Author:
Abhinav Vaidya
Author:
Rachel Page
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics