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ACUTE ANAL FISSURESMOKING PATTERNS
Author(s) -
Noreen Rahat Hashmi,
Khalid Maqsood,
Seema Daud,
Shezad Saleem,
Iram Manzoor,
Usman Javaid
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
the professional medical journal/the professional medical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2071-7733
pISSN - 1024-8919
DOI - 10.29309/tpmj/2009.16.03.2801
Subject(s) - medicine , peer pressure , family medicine , descriptive statistics , curiosity , demography , psychology , social psychology , statistics , mathematics , sociology
Objective: To determine the smoking patterns of medical students of 4th year MBBS. Design: A cross-sectional survey. Setting:Lahore Medical and Dental College (LMDC), Lahore, Pakistan. P e r i o d : From November to December 2006. M e t h o d o l o g y : The 50 medicalstudents of 4th year MBBS, who were current smokers. A structured questionnaire was used to collect the data. Descriptive statistics wasdetermined in terms of percentages. Results: In present study, 48% students started smoking between 14-17 years of age, 34% started tosmoke between ages 18-21 years and 18% of them had been smoking for past 4-6 yrs. Main reason to commence smoking included curiosity(27%), need to look glamorous (22%), peer pressure (16%) and stress relieving (10%). When probed about numbers of cigarettes smoked daily,the response of majority was that 32% of students admitted to smoking 1 -5 cigarettes, similar number admitted to smoking 6-10 cigarettes, and30% of students smoked more than 20 cigarettes. Among the respondents, 41 % had a brother who was a smoker and 37% had a father whowas a smoker. More than half the respondents (58%) said that their parents were unaware of their smoking habit. Regarding awareness aboutthe medical hazards of smoking, 31% of students named cancer, 29% mentioned heart disease, 18% were familiar with COPD and only 7%referred to stroke. The main concerns of respondents regarding smoking were fear of being discovered by their parents (22%), psychologicaldependence (20%) and physical dependence (18%). Only 50% of students tried to quit smoking, using hypnosis and substitutes like nicotinegum and nicotine patches. Conclusion: Tobacco smoking among medical students is alarming. These findings not only raise concerns for thefuture health of our medical students but also their credibility and effectiveness as health promoters for population at large.

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