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Bulletin of the World Health OrganizationVolume 91, Issue 10, October 2013, Pages 757-764

Smoking-attributable mortality in Bangladesh: Proportional mortality study(Article)(Open Access)

[Mortalité attribuable au tabagisme au Bangladesh: Une étude proportionnelle de la mortalité]

  • Alam, D.S.,
  • Jha, P.,
  • Ramasundarahettige, C.,
  • Streatfield, P.K.,
  • Niessen, L.W.,
  • Chowdhury, M.A.H.,
  • Siddiquee, A.T.,
  • Ahmed, S.,
  • Evans, T.G.
  • View Correspondence (jump link)
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  • aCentre for Control of Chronic Diseases, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research Bangladesh, 68 Shaheed Tajuddin Ahmed Sarani, Mohakhali, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh
  • bCentre for Global Health Research, St Michael's Hospital at University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
  • cHuman Development Network, The World Bank, WA, United States

Abstract

Objective To directly estimate how much smoking contributes to cause-specific mortality in Bangladesh. Methods A case-control study was conducted with surveillance data from Matlab, a rural subdistrict. Cases (n = 2213) and controls (n = 261) were men aged 25 to 69 years who had died between 2003 and 2010 from smoking-related and non-smoking-related causes, respectively. Cause-specific odds ratios (ORs) were calculated for "ever-smokers" versus "never-smokers", with adjustment for education, tobacco chewing status and age. Smoking-attributable deaths among cases, national attributable fractions and cumulative probability of surviving from 25 to 69 years of age among ever-smokers and never-smokers were also calculated. Findings The fraction of ever-smokers was about 84% among cases and 73% among controls (OR: 1.7; 99% confidence interval, CI: 1.1-2.5). ORs were highest for cancers and lower for respiratory, vascular and other diseases. A dose-response relationship was noted between age at smoking initiation and daily number of cigarettes or bidis smoked and the risk of death. Among 25-year-old Bangladeshi men, 32% of ever-smokers will die before reaching 70 years of age, compared with 19% of never-smokers. In 2010, about 25% of all deaths observed in Bangladeshi men aged 25 to 69 years (i.e. 42 000 deaths) were attributable to smoking. Conclusion Smoking causes about 25% of all deaths in Bangladeshi men aged 25 to 69 years and an average loss of seven years of life per smoker. Without a substantial increase in smoking cessation rates, which are low among Bangladeshi men, smoking-attributable deaths in Bangladesh are likely to increase.

Indexed keywords

GEOBASE Subject Index:cancercardiovascular diseasehealth geographyhealth riskmortalityrespiratory diseasesmoking
EMTREE medical terms:adultageagedarticleattributable riskBangladeshbidi smokingcase control studycause of deathcontrolled studyeducational statushumanmajor clinical studymalemalignant neoplastic diseasemortalityprobabilityrespiratory tract diseaserisk assessmentrural areasmokeless tobaccosmokingsmoking cessationsmoking habitsurvival ratevascular disease
Regional Index:Bangladesh
Species Index:Nicotiana tabacum
MeSH:AdultAgedBangladeshCause of DeathConfidence IntervalsHumansMaleMiddle AgedOdds RatioPopulation SurveillanceRetrospective StudiesSmoking

Funding details

Funding sponsor Funding number Acronym
TW007939-01
Fogarty International Center
See opportunities by FIC
R01TW007939FIC
  • ISSN: 00429686
  • CODEN: BWHOA
  • Source Type: Journal
  • Original language: English, French
  • DOI: 10.2471/BLT.13.120196
  • PubMed ID: 24115799
  • Document Type: Article

  Alam, D. S.; Centre for Control of Chronic Diseases, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research Bangladesh, 68 Shaheed Tajuddin Ahmed Sarani, Bangladesh;
© Copyright 2013 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

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View details of all 37 citations
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