© 2004 American Public Health Association
Anna Gilmore, Joceline Pomerleau, and Martin McKee are with the European Centre on Health of Societies in Transition, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, England. Richard Rose is with the Centre for the Study of Public Policy, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland. At the time of the study, Christian W. Haerpfer was with the Institute for Advanced Studies, Vienna, Austria. David Rotman is with the Center of Sociological and Political Studies, Belarus State University, Minsk, Belarus. Sergej Tumanov is with the Centre for Sociological Studies, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia. Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Anna Gilmore, MSc, MFPH, European Centre on Health of Societies in Transition, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, England (e-mail: anna.gilmore{at}lshtm.ac.uk).
Objectives. We sought to provide comparative data on smoking habits in countries of the former Soviet Union. Methods. We conducted cross-sectional surveys in 8 former Soviet countries with representative national samples of the population 18 years or older. Results. Smoking rates varied among men, from 43.3% to 65.3% among the countries examined. Results showed that smoking among women remains uncommon in Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, and Moldova (rates of 2.4%6.3%). In Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Russia, rates were higher (9.3%15.5%). Men start smoking at significantly younger ages than women, smoke more cigarettes per day, and are more likely to be nicotine dependent. Conclusions. Smoking rates among men in these countries have been high for some time and remain among the highest in the world. Smoking rates among women have increased from previous years and appear to reflect transnational tobacco company activity.
In 1990, it was estimated that a 35-year-old man in the former Soviet Union had twice the risk of dying from tobacco-related causes before the age of 70 years as a man in the European Union (20% vs 10%).1 In the former Soviet Union, 56% of male cancer deaths and 40% of all deaths are attributed to tobacco, compared with 47% and 35%, respectively, in the European Union.1 Rates of circulatory disease among both men and women are approximately triple those in the European Union.2 Moreover, tobacco-related mortality continues to increase in the former Soviet Union, while it has stabilized or declined in the European Union as a whole.1 Despite these deplorably high levels of tobacco-related mortality, relatively little is known about smoking prevalence rates in the region. Virtually no recent or reliable data exist for the central Asian countries (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan),2,3 and recent surveys conducted in Georgia have been limited to the capital, Tbilisi.4,5 Data from elsewhere in the Caucasus (Armenia, Azerbaijan) are scarce,6 and historical figures7 are inconsistent with later findings, leading authors to rely on anecdotal reports of smoking rates.8 Historical3 and more recent data, derived largely from Russia,9 Ukraine,10 Belarus,11 and the Baltic states,12 showperhaps unsurprisingly, given the mortality figures just describedthat smoking rates among men are high (45%60%) while rates are far lower among women (1%20%).2 The higher rates previously seen among Estonian women are now being matched by rates among women in the other Baltic states2,12,13 and by women in other urban areas.9,10 Unfortunately, other than the Baltic states, few countries collect information using similar data collection tools, thereby precluding accurate between-country comparisons. These issues underlie the need in the former Soviet Union for comparable and accurate data on smoking prevalence, given that such data are widely recognized as a prerequisite for the development of effective public health policies.1416 This need is made more urgent by the profound changes occurring as a result of the former Soviet Unions recent economic transition and, more specifically, by the changes taking place in its tobacco industry.17 The latter were first felt as soon as these formerly closed markets opened, with a rapid influx of cigarette imports and advertising.1820 Later, as part of the large-scale privatization of state assets, most of the newly independent states privatized their tobacco industries, and the transnational tobacco companies established a local manufacturing presence, investing more than $2.7 billion in 10 countries of the former Soviet Union between 1991 and 2000.21 Evidence from the industrys previous entry into Asia suggests that these changes are likely to have a significant upward impact on cigarette consumption.22,23 In response to these and other health and social issues facing the region, a major research projectthe Living Conditions, Lifestyles and Health Studywas commissioned as part of the European Unions Copernicus program. This investigation involved surveys conducted in 8 of the 15 newly independent states: Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, and Ukraine.24 We present data on smoking prevalence, including age- and gender-specific smoking rates, age at initiation of smoking, and indicators of nicotine dependence.
Study Population and Sampling Procedures In autumn 2001, quantitative cross-sectional surveys were conducted in each country by organizations with expertise in survey research using standardized methods25 (described in detail elsewhere26). In brief, each survey sought to include representative samples of the national adult population 18 years or older, although a few small regions had to be excluded as a result of geographic inaccessibility, sociopolitical situation, or prevailing military action: Abkhazia and Ossetia in Georgia, the Transdniester region and the municipality of Bender in Moldova, the Chechen and Ingush republics, and autonomous districts located in the far north of the Russian Federation. Samples were selected via multistage random sampling with stratification by region and area. Within each primary sampling unit, households were selected according to standardized random route procedures; the exception was Armenia, where household lists were used to provide a random sample. Within each household, the adult with the birthday nearest to the date of the survey was selected to be interviewed. At least 2000 respondents were included in each country; 4006 residents of the Russian Federation and 2400 residents of Ukraine were interviewed, reflecting the larger and more diverse populations of these countries.
Questionnaire Design
Statistical Analyses Current smokers were defined as respondents reporting currently smoking at least 1 cigarette per day. We calculated age- and gender-specific smoking prevalence rates for each country. Given the negative health effects of early initiation, we examined age at smoking initiation among current smokers, as well as number of cigarettes smoked. We assessed level of nicotine dependence, an indication of smokers ability or inability to quit, by identifying the percentage of current smokers who smoked more than 20 cigarettes per day and smoked within an hour of waking. This level of use is equivalent to a score of 3 or more on the abbreviated Fagerstrom dependency scale28,29 and indicates moderate (score of 3 or 4) to severe (score of 5 or above) dependency.
Within each country, gender differences in smoking habits were assessed with
Response Rates A total of 18428 individuals were surveyed. Response rates (calculated from the total number of households for which an eligible person could be identified) varied from 71% to 88% among the countries included. Rates of nonresponse for individual items were very low (e.g., 0.03% for current smoking and 0.5% for education level).
Sample Characteristics and Representativeness
Smoking Prevalence Rates of male smoking were high. In many of the countries surveyed, almost 80% of male respondents reported a history of smoking (Table 2
Rates among women were far lower (gender comparisons were significant at the .001 level in all countries) and somewhat more variable, ranging from 2.4% to 15.5%; the lowest rates were seen in Armenia, Moldova, and Kyrgyzstan and the highest in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine. Smoking among women in Russia was significantly more prevalent than among women in all of the other countries under study (P < .01) although adjusting for age removed the difference between Russia and Belarus (data not shown).
The relationship between smoking and age varied by gender. Among men, with the exception of those residing in Moldova, smoking prevalence rates varied little between the ages of 18 and 59 years but then declined more markedly in men above the age of 60 years (Table 2
Age at Initiation The majority of male smokers reported that they began smoking before the age of 20 years, and, on average, a quarter reported that they began in childhood (Table 3
Differences also were observed between countries; in Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine, geometric mean ages at smoking initiation were younger than 18 years among men and younger than 20 years among women, compared with older ages at smoking initiation elsewhere. Overall, between-country differences were significant for both women and men (P <.001); however, Bonferroni multiple comparisons showed that there were significant differences among women only in comparisons involving Armenia and countries other than Georgia and Moldova (P < .01; data not shown). Among men, significantly younger ages at initiation were observed in Russia and Ukraine versus Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, and Moldova; in Belarus versus Armenia and Kyrgyzstan; and in Kazakhstan versus Kyrgyzstan (all P <.01; data not shown).
Amount Smoked and Nicotine Dependence The majority of smokers reported smoking their first cigarette within an hour of waking, although, in all countries other than Georgia, a far higher proportion of men than women did so (P < .01). Thus, men were more likely to be moderately to severely dependent on nicotine, although gender differences were significant only for Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine.
The surveys conducted in this study provide important new data on the prevalence of smoking in 8 countries representing more than four fifths of the population of the former Soviet Union. In the case of some of these countries, these data represent the first accurate, countrywide smoking prevalence data reported. In addition, they provide some of the first truly comparative data for countries of the former Soviet Union other than the Baltic states,31,32 and, because of the focus on obtaining accurate information on sample characteristics, they offer advantages over data available in public databases. Response rates were relatively high, and the samples were broadly representative of the overall country populations.
Study Limitations In addition, the surveys were based on self-reported smoking status; there was no independent biochemical validation, and thus the smoking rates observed may have been affected by reporting bias. Although there is concern on the part of some that self-reports of smoking status may produce underestimates of smoking levels, studies conducted in Western countries suggest that this technique is sensitive and specific; they also suggest that more accurate responses are provided in interviewer-administered questionnaires than in self-completed questionnaires.33 The only study conducted in the former Soviet Union that has addressed this issue showed that, among individuals claiming to be nonsmokers, 13% (48/368) of women and 17% (12/375) of men in rural northwestern Russia were in fact, according to blood cotinine levels, likely to be smokers, compared with only 2% of men and women in Finland.34 Given the far lower prevalence of smoking among women, this had disproportionately large effects on reported rates of smoking among women. Although our questionnaires were administered by interviewers in respondents homes, potentially making it more difficult for respondents who smoked to deny doing so, we may have underestimated smoking prevalence rates, particularly in the case of women residing in areas where smoking remains culturally unacceptable. A final shortfall of the present study was the failure to measure smokeless tobacco use, which is relatively common in parts of the former Soviet Union, mainly Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan. However, although chewing tobacco is used in some of the southern regions of Kyrgyzstan, cigarettes are the main form of tobacco used there as well as in all of the other countries in which surveys were conducted.8,35
Findings In the case of men, the lower prevalence of current smokers and higher prevalence of never and former smokers among those 60 years or older probably reflect the disproportionate number of premature deaths among current smokers relative to never and former smokers. However, a cohort effect has been shown in the former Soviet Union, with those who were teenagers between 1945 and 1953 carrying forward lower smoking rates because cigarettes, like other consumer goods, were in short supply in the period of postwar austerity under Stalin.36,37 This cohort effect is also thought to account for the unexpected current decline in male lung cancer deaths,36 which must be set against the overall rise in male tobacco-related mortality1 and, in particular, increases in the already staggeringly high number of cardiovascular deaths.2 In comparison with male smoking patterns, smoking among women is far less common, varies more between countries, and exhibits a different age-specific pattern. Although rates of lifetime smoking are below 4% among individuals older than 60 years in all 8 countries, in the 4 countries with the highest smoking rates among women (Belarus, Ka-zakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine), smoking is now significantly more common among members of the younger generations; risk ratios between the youngest and oldest age groups range from 12.2 to 37.3, compared with a range of 1.0 to 5.5 in the other 4 countries. Lopez et al.38 outlined a 4-stage model of the patterns of a smoking epidemic based on observations from Western countries. In this model, such an epidemic is described as involving an initial rise in male smoking followed by a rise in female smoking 1 to 2 decades later, after which each plateaus and then falls as a result of tobacco-related mortality, finally rising to a peak decades later. Our findings suggest that the former Soviet Unions tobacco epidemic may have developed differently. Male smoking has a long history in this region. The first accounts of tobacco smoking in Russia date from the 17th century,39 papirossi (a type of cigarette, popular in the former Soviet Union, characterized by a long, hollow mouthpiece that can be twisted before smoking) were first mentioned in 1844,39 and cigarette factories were first constructed later in the 19th century.40,41 Historical data on smoking3 and high male tobacco-related mortality rates1 suggest that smoking among men has been at a high level for some time and, contrary to the predictions of the 4-stage model just mentioned, has failed to exhibit a postpeak decline. Smoking among women remains relatively uncommon, and rates have been far slower to rise than would be expected given male rates in the former Soviet Union and trends observed in the West. Indeed, it appears that female rates began to increase only in the mid-to late 1990s, when transnational tobacco companies arrived with their carefully targeted marketing strategies.1820 Therefore, although the exact stage of the epidemic varies slightly between the countries of the former Soviet Union, overall we suggest that men have remained between stages 3 and 4, with high rates of both smoking and mortality, while women in some countries are at stage 1 and others at stage 2, the latter with more rapidly rising smoking rates. Although rates of cardiovascular disease have been increasing, this can largely be explained by risk factors other than tobacco (including diet and stress), and female lung cancer rates have yet to increase. Comparisons between our results and previous data are problematic given that much of the information that exists is fragmentary, of uncertain quality, and rarely nationally representative. This is particularly the case in the central Asian and Caucasian states, although limited data from Armenia and Moldova gathered between 1998 and 2001 suggest few changes in smoking prevalence rates2,6; data from Kazakhstan suggest small increases from the 60% male and 7% female prevalence rates recorded in 1996.2 More data are available for Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine. These data suggest that smoking rates in men have changed little,2,10,11,42 although in Russia they appeared to rise between the 1970s and 1980s2,3,7 and into the mid-1990s, with little subsequent change. Among women, rates appear to have increased in all 3 countries,2,11 and Russian data suggest that although rates have been rising since the 1970s, increases were most notable during the 1990s.3,7,9,43 Between-gender and intercountry differences in smoking prevalence rates are reflected in other smoking indicators as well; for example, men are more likely than women to start smoking when they are young, to smoke more heavily, and to be nicotine dependent. Two separate groupings of countries appeared to emerge from the between-country comparisons: Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine, on one hand, and Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, and Moldova, on the other. In addition to exhibiting higher smoking rates among women and more pronounced age-specific trends, the former group tended to show lower ages at smoking initiation (particularly in comparison with Armenia, Georgia, and Moldova) along with more marked gender differences in regard to number of cigarettes smoked per day and level of nicotine dependency. The differences observed in this study suggest that smoking patterns in Armenia, Georgia, Moldova, and Kyrgyzstan are more traditional than those in Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine. This situation can be explained by the differing degree of transnational tobacco company penetration.21,44 Industry in Moldova continues to be in the form of a state-owned monopoly; industry in Georgia and Armenia has been privatized, but this change was rather recent (occurring after 1997), and none of the major transnational tobacco companies have invested directly in those countries.21 Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine, by contrast, saw major investments from most major transnational tobacco companies beginning in the early 1990s. Belarus, which retains a state-owned monopoly system, and Kyrgyzstan, where the German cigarette manufacturer Reemtsma has invested, would therefore appear to be exceptions, with Belarus more typical of the countries with transnational tobacco company investments and Kyrgyzstan more typical of the countries without such investments. In Belarus, however, the state tobacco manufacturer has only a 40% market share, with smuggled and counterfeit brands accounting for an additional 40% of this share. The importance the transnational tobacco companies attach to the illegal market in Belarus can be seen in the fact that, despite having little official market share,44 British American Tobacco and Philip Morris have the highest outdoor advertising budgets and the 9th and 10th highest television advertising budgets of all companies operating in that country.45 In Belarus, as in Ukraine and Russia, tobacco is the product most heavily advertised outdoors and the fourth most advertised product on television (there are now restrictions on television advertising in Ukraine and Russia).45,46 Thus, it appears that with the continuing (if so far fruitless) discussions of possible reunification with Russia, the transnational tobacco companies treat Belarus as an important extension of the Russian market.47 Kyrgyzstan differs from the other countries in which there have been transnational tobacco company investments in that these investments occurred later (in 1998) and one company, Reemtsma, achieved a manufacturing monopoly.44 However, Kyrgyzstan also differs from Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and Russia in regard to its lower levels of development and industrialization and its larger rural and Muslim populations. Other potential explanations for the between-country differences observed cannot be excluded here, and such possibilities are explored in a separate article.48 Whatever reasons emerge, the rising rates of smoking among women and the younger ages of smoking initiation are cause for concern in all of these countries. Meanwhile, the present findings, combined with earlier data on disease burden,1,37 confirm that high smoking rates among men continue unabated. Smoking among women in Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, and Moldova remains relatively uncommon and does not appear to have increased significantly, as can be seen in rates among the younger relative to older generations and in limited comparisons with previous data. By contrast, smoking rates among women in Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Russia showed an increase from previous surveys, and age-specific rates suggest an ongoing increase in tobacco use among members of the younger generations. It is probably not a coincidence that these higher rates were observed in the countries with the most active transnational tobacco company presence.
Conclusions
We are grateful to the members of the Living Conditions, Lifestyles and Health Study teams who participated in the coordination and organization of data collection for this study. The Living Conditions, Lifestyles and Health Study is funded by the European Community (contract ICA2-200010031). Support for A. Gilmores and M. McKees work on tobacco was also provided by the National Cancer Institute (grant 1 R01 CA91021-01). Note. The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Community.
Human Participant Protection
Contributors A. Gilmore contributed to questionnaire design and data analysis and drafted the article. J. Pomerleau and M. McKee contributed to questionnaire design, data analysis, and revisions of the article. R. Rose contributed to questionnaire design and generation of hypotheses. C. W. Haerpfer, D. Rotman, and S. Tumanov designed and supervised the conduct of the surveys. M. McKee, C. W. Haerpfer, D. Rotman, and S. Tumanov originated and supervised the overall study. Accepted for publication December 29, 2003.
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