Pathways of disadvantage and smoking careers: evidence and policy implications
Pathways of disadvantage and smoking careers: evidence and policy implications
OBJECTIVES: To investigate in older industrialised societies (a) how social disadvantage contributes to smoking risk among women (b) the role of social and economic policies in reducing disadvantage and moderating wider inequalities in life chances and living standards.
METHODS: Review and analysis of (a) the effects of disadvantage in childhood and into adulthood on women's smoking status in early adulthood (b) policy impacts on the social exposures associated with high smoking risk.
MAIN RESULTS: (a) Smoking status--ever smoking, current smoking, heavy smoking, and cessation--is influenced not only by current circumstances but by longer term biographies of disadvantage (b) social and economic policies shape key social predictors of women's smoking status, including childhood circumstances, educational levels and adult circumstances, and moderate inequalities in the distribution of these dimensions of life chances and living standards. Together, the two sets of findings argue for a policy toolkit that acts on the distal determinants of smoking, with interventions targeting the conditions in which future and current smokers live.
CONCLUSIONS: An approach to tobacco control is advocated that combines changing smoking habits with reducing inequalities in the social trajectories in which they are embedded. Policies to level up opportunities and living standards across the lifecourse should be championed as part of an equity oriented approach to reducing the disease burden of cigarette smoking.
smoking, humans, public policy, standards, health, disease, methods, adult, child, risk, socioeconomic factors, poverty, societies, women, male, exposure, taxes, female, analysis, childhood, research, review, vulnerable populations, sws
7-12
Graham, H.
e912b168-f95c-4971-9bff-fec85de7413a
Inskip, H.M.
5fb4470a-9379-49b2-a533-9da8e61058b7
Francis, B.
1012a8dd-bd19-4971-b0e6-93d494e43bb5
Harman, J.
eff23ce3-95f8-48ed-8507-9c2e8ac6002c
2006
Graham, H.
e912b168-f95c-4971-9bff-fec85de7413a
Inskip, H.M.
5fb4470a-9379-49b2-a533-9da8e61058b7
Francis, B.
1012a8dd-bd19-4971-b0e6-93d494e43bb5
Harman, J.
eff23ce3-95f8-48ed-8507-9c2e8ac6002c
Graham, H., Inskip, H.M., Francis, B. and Harman, J.
(2006)
Pathways of disadvantage and smoking careers: evidence and policy implications.
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 60 (Supplement 2), .
(doi:10.1136/jech.2005.045583).
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To investigate in older industrialised societies (a) how social disadvantage contributes to smoking risk among women (b) the role of social and economic policies in reducing disadvantage and moderating wider inequalities in life chances and living standards.
METHODS: Review and analysis of (a) the effects of disadvantage in childhood and into adulthood on women's smoking status in early adulthood (b) policy impacts on the social exposures associated with high smoking risk.
MAIN RESULTS: (a) Smoking status--ever smoking, current smoking, heavy smoking, and cessation--is influenced not only by current circumstances but by longer term biographies of disadvantage (b) social and economic policies shape key social predictors of women's smoking status, including childhood circumstances, educational levels and adult circumstances, and moderate inequalities in the distribution of these dimensions of life chances and living standards. Together, the two sets of findings argue for a policy toolkit that acts on the distal determinants of smoking, with interventions targeting the conditions in which future and current smokers live.
CONCLUSIONS: An approach to tobacco control is advocated that combines changing smoking habits with reducing inequalities in the social trajectories in which they are embedded. Policies to level up opportunities and living standards across the lifecourse should be championed as part of an equity oriented approach to reducing the disease burden of cigarette smoking.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 2006
Keywords:
smoking, humans, public policy, standards, health, disease, methods, adult, child, risk, socioeconomic factors, poverty, societies, women, male, exposure, taxes, female, analysis, childhood, research, review, vulnerable populations, sws
Organisations:
Dev Origins of Health & Disease
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 61178
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61178
ISSN: 0143-005X
PURE UUID: 60e431d6-cc5e-4c64-bfaa-baf69631ddd0
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 04 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:55
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
H. Graham
Author:
B. Francis
Author:
J. Harman
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