Female smokers in India
has gone up in the last 30 years but the number of men who puff daily
dipped in the country where more people are smoking today, say
researchers.
Smoking among Indian men fell from 33.8 per cent in 1980 to 23
per cent in 2012 while female smoking in 2012 was 3.2 per cent, almost
the same as in 1980 (3 per cent), says a new study on global smoking
prevalence published earlier this month in the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
In the year 2012 a total of 12.1 million women smoked in India,
compared to 5.3 million female smokers in 1980 while the prevalence of
male smokers was estimated to be 98 million in the same year. Smokers in
India also consumed an average of 8.2 cigarettes per day said the
report.
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United States had 14.3 per cent women smokers followed by Russia and Nepal (both 16.9 per cent), Brazil (11 per cent) Pakistan (5.4 per cent) Indonesia (3.6 per cent) India (3.2 per cent) China (2.1 per cent) Bangladesh (1.8 per cent) and Sri Lanka (1 per cent).
The study, titled "Smoking Prevalence and Cigarette Consumption
in 187 Countries, 1980-2012," by Seattle-based Institute for Health
Metrics and Evaluation (IHME)referred to in-country surveys, government
statistics and data by the World Health Organisation.
Also India gained 35 million smokers totalling to 110 million
despite a fall in the smoking rate from 19 per cent to 13 per cent of
the population, said the study published in the in the Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA).
The report found that global smoking rate among men was 41 per
cent in 1980, but declined to an average of 31 per cent. Among women,
the estimated prevalence of daily tobacco smoking was 10.6 per cent in
1980 and by 2012 that had fallen to 6.2 per cent.
"India is currently in the phase 2 of the tobacco epidemic,
which follows a cyclical pattern. While there are male smokers, women
smokers follow the trend in this phase," points out Dr Monika Arora,
Senior Director, HRIDAY, a voluntary organisation working in the field
of health promotion among adolescents in India.
She says the number of women smoking in urban areas has
increased. "We did a survey of schools in Chennai and Delhi and found
that the there is a very narrow gender gap among adolescents who are
smoking. Plus studies have put the And the prevalence of overall tobacco
use among men as 47 per cent and women 21 per cent in the country,"
says Monika.
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