Smoke intake among smokers is higher in lower socioeconomic groups
- PMID: 10982575
- PMCID: PMC1748362
- DOI: 10.1136/tc.9.3.310
Smoke intake among smokers is higher in lower socioeconomic groups
Abstract
Objective: To analyse socioeconomic differences in serum thiocyanate concentrations among current smokers, and whether such differences persist after adjustment for the number of cigarettes smoked.
Setting: General population of six districts of the Czech Republic in 1992.
Participants: 451 male and 282 female current smokers.
Main outcome measure: Serum concentration of thiocyanate.
Results: There was a clear educational gradient in serum thiocyanate among male smokers; car ownership and crowding were not related to thiocyanate. Age adjusted mean concentrations in men with primary, vocational, secondary, and university education were 168.6, 158.2, 148.2, and 141.8 micromol/l, respectively (p for trend 0.032). Adjustment for the average daily number of cigarettes explained a part of this gradient. Socioeconomic differences in serum thiocyanate were not seen in women.
Conclusion: The strong gradient in men suggests that smokers from lower socioeconomic groups have a preference for higher smoke intake and so may be more nicotine dependent. This finding, if confirmed, would have important implications for anti-smoking programmes.
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