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Determinants of tobacco use in Sudan: secondary analysis of STEPwise Survey 2016
Author(s) -
Muur,
Naiema A. Wagialla,
Mai Eltigany,
Manal Elemam,
Nazik Ibrahim,
Nahid Ali,
Fatima Hassan,
Nazik Hassan,
Nazik Nurelhuda
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
eastern mediterranean health journal/eastern mediterranean health journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.442
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1687-1634
pISSN - 1020-3397
DOI - 10.26719/emhj.20.104
Subject(s) - smokeless tobacco , socioeconomic status , context (archaeology) , unemployment , medicine , tobacco control , stepwise regression , cluster sampling , logistic regression , demography , environmental health , household income , cross sectional study , tobacco use , public health , geography , population , economic growth , nursing , archaeology , pathology , sociology , economics
Background: Tobacco is a leading cause of death and illness despite > 50 years of antitobacco efforts. Aims: To establish the determinants of current and former smoking and smokeless tobacco use in Sudan as measured by the STEPwise Survey 2016. Methods: A household-based cross-sectional World Health Organization STEPwise Survey was conducted among 7745 Sudanese citizens aged 18–69 years across 11 states in Sudan. A 4-stage stratified cluster sampling design was implemented. The generic STEPS Instrument (version 3.2) was used and questions were tailored to the Sudanese context. Results: Among current male smokers, 63.7% were aged ≤ 35 years, 50.7% were illiterate or did not complete primary school, 84.5% were employed and 52.4% were in the lowest 2 quintiles of income. Among male smokeless tobacco users, 54.8% were aged ≤ 35 years, 48.4% were illiterate or did not complete primary school, 89.7% were employed and 52.2% were in the lowest 2 quintiles of income. Using multivariate logistic regression models, current smoking in men was associated with older age, informal education, unemployment and lower income. Smokeless tobacco use was associated with age 18–25 years, informal education, unemployment and lower income. Conclusions: Both forms of tobacco use were associated with poor socioeconomic status and unemployment. Smokeless tobacco use was associated with age 18–25 years as opposed to smoking tobacco use. These results can inform the target audience of the future tobacco control plans.

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