Journal of Public Health 26(1) © Faculty of Public Health 2004; all rights reserved.
Changing social gradients in cigarette smoking and cessation over two decades of adult follow-up in a British birth cohort
Barbara J. M. H. Jefferis, Research Fellow
Chris Power, Professor1
Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH
Hilary Graham, Professor
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, Bowland Tower East, Alexandra Square, Lancaster LA1 4YT
Orly Manor, Senior Lecturer
School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Hebrew University, Hassadah, Jerusalem, Israel
Address correspondence to Professor Chris Power. E-mail: C.Power{at}ich.ucl.ac.uk
Background We aimed to establish whether socioeconomic gradients in smoking among men and women increase with age as a result of differential uptake, quitting and smoking persistence over time.
Methods A prospective British birth cohort (all births 39 March 1958) was followed to 41 years. Analyses of smoking at 41 years by socioeconomic position of origin include 10521 participants and for socioeconomic position at 23 years n = 9240.
Results By 41 years half of the cohort had smoked regularly (
1 cigarette/day). Smoking prevalence peaked at 23 years (40 per cent) and subsequently declined; quitting increased between 23 years (10 per cent) and 41 years (29 per cent). Individuals from manual backgrounds were more likely to smoke and less likely to quit than those from non-manual groups, and these differences increased over the two decades during which the cohort was followed up. For social position of origin, the odds ratio for current smoking at 23 years among women was 1.28 (95 per cent confidence interval (CI) 1.21, 1.35), i.e. a 28 per cent greater risk of smoking per unit increment on a four-point scale from professional/managerial to unskilled manual. The odds ratio increased to 1.45 (95 per cent CI 1.36, 1.56) at 41 years, trend over time p = 0.01. For men, equivalent results are 1.18 (1.11, 1.24) at 23 years and 1.33 (1.24, 1.42) at 41 years, trend p = 0.01. The social gradients in current smoking also increase over time for men and women using social position at 23 years.
Conclusion Conclusions Social gradients in smoking have become more marked across the lifecourse of this birth cohort. This implies continued socioeconomic inequalities in future health outcomes in a contemporary adult population.
Keywords: smoking, gradients, health inequalities, prospective cohort
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