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. 2013;18(2):190-210.
doi: 10.1080/13557858.2012.700917. Epub 2012 Jul 4.

The role of education for current, former and never-smoking among non-western immigrants in Norway. Does the pattern fit the model of the cigarette epidemic?

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Free PMC article

The role of education for current, former and never-smoking among non-western immigrants in Norway. Does the pattern fit the model of the cigarette epidemic?

Tord Finne Vedøy. Ethn Health. 2013.
Free PMC article

Abstract

Objectives: The aim was (1) to investigate the association between education and smoking status (current, former and never-smoking) among non-western immigrants in Norway and (2) examine if these associations fit the pattern predicted by the model of the cigarette epidemic.

Design: Data came from the Oslo Health Study and the Oslo Immigrant Health study (2000-2002). The first included all Oslo citizens from seven selected birth cohorts. The second included all Oslo citizens born in Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, Vietnam and Sri Lanka. 14,768 respondents answered questions on smoking, education and relevant background variables (over-all response rate 43.3%). Two gender specific multinomial logistic regression models with smoking status [current, former or never-smoker (reference)] as dependent variable were computed and predicted probabilities of smoking status among groups with different levels of education were calculated.

Results: Smoking prevalence among men ranged from 19% among Sri Lankans to 56% among Turks. Compared to the smoking prevalence among Norwegian men (27%), smoking was widespread among Iranians (42%) and Vietnamese (36%). Higher education was associated with lower probability of current smoking among all male immigrant groups except Sri Lankans. Never having smoked was positively associated with education among Pakistani and Norwegian men. Among women, <5% smoked among Pakistanis, Vietnamese and Sri Lankans. Smoking prevalence among Turkish (28%) and Iranian (23%) women were comparable to Norwegian women (30%). The probability of smoking among Turkish and Iranian women with secondary education was higher than for other levels of education. The probability of being a never-smoker was high among Turkish and Iranian women with primary education.

Conclusions: High smoking prevalence among Turkish and Iranian men highlights the importance of addressing smoking behaviour in subgroups of the general population. Smoking was almost non-existent among Pakistani, Vietnamese and Sri Lankan women and indicates strong persistent social norms against smoking.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Marginal mean probabilities and 95% confidence intervals of current smoking at different levels of education. Men, Oslo 2000/2002.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Marginal mean probabilities and 95% confidence intervals of former smoking at different levels of education. Men, Oslo 2000/2002.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Marginal mean probabilities and 95% confidence intervals of never-smoking at different levels of education. Men, Oslo 2000/2002.
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
Marginal mean probabilities and 95% confidence intervals of current smoking at different levels of education. Women, Oslo 2000/2002.
Figure 5.
Figure 5.
Marginal mean probabilities and 95% confidence intervals of former smoking at different levels of education. Women, Oslo 2000/2002.
Figure 6.
Figure 6.
Marginal mean probabilities and 95% confidence intervals of never-smoking at different levels of education. Women, Oslo 2000/2002.

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