Journal ArticleOpen Access
Smoking-attributable mortality in Bangladesh: proportional mortality study
Author Affiliations
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, St. Michael's Hospital, Centre for Global Health Research, World Bank, ...
Published InBulletin of the World Health Organization
Year2013
Citations79
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,…
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