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Chewing Tobacco: Who Uses and Who Quits? Findings From NHANES III, 1988–1994

Beth Howard-Pitney, PhD and Marilyn A. Winkleby, PhD, MPH

The authors are with the Stanford Center for Research in Disease Prevention, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, Calif.



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FIGURE 1 —Groups of men at high and low risk for lifetime regular use of chewing tobacco (10.7% overall rate, n = 4371).

 


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FIGURE 2 —Groups of men who had been lifetime regular users of chewing tobacco at high and low risk for quitting (60.3% overall rate, n = 466).

 


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FIGURE 3 —Hazard curves for age at onset for regular cigarette smoking and chewing tobacco use for men aged 25 to 64 years.

 





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