Hong Kong tobacco deaths presage vast China epidemic.
نویسنده
چکیده
A huge epidemic of smoking-related deaths is forecast for China, whose inhabitants account for 20% of the world's population and smoke 30% of the world's cigarettes. A study carried out in Hong Kong and reported in the 18 August British Medical Journal suggests that estimated deaths in China caused by smoking could rise from the current 1 million a year to about 3 million a year during the 2040s. In Hong Kong, cigarette consumption peaked in the early 1970s — about 20 years earlier than in mainland China. Sir Richard Peto, co-director of the Clinical Trials Service Unit at the University of Oxford and one of the authors of the study, told the Bulletin: ''The results of this study make it clear that Chinese populations can have substantial proportions of deaths caused by tobacco. Yet going back to the 1980s, there was a general conviction in China that cigarette smoking was not a serious health problem.'' As recently as 1997, he said, a survey presented to the 10th World Conference on Tobacco or Health held that year in Beijing had found that 96% of Chinese adults in the general population did not know that smoking could cause heart disease, and 60% did not know that smoking could cause lung cancer. The Hong Kong study was carried out by Professor Lam Tai Hing of the University of Hong Kong, together with colleagues in Hong Kong, and Peto. It was based on records and verbal accounts of more than 27 000 ethnic Chinese, aged 35 and over, whose deaths were registered in Hong Kong in 1998. Using a questionnaire completed usually by the person reporting the death, the researchers sought information about the cause of death and the dead person's lifestyle, including information on his or her smoking habits 10 years before death (before illness could have modified the person's smoking habits). These details were compared with those of living controls of the same age. Analysis of the Hong Kong data showed that tobacco caused about 33% of all male deaths at ages 35–69, plus 5% of all female deaths — in other words, 25% of all deaths at these ages. For comparison, in the European Union, the proportion of deaths caused by smoking among adults aged 35–69 years in 1995 was estimated to be 32% for males and 10% for females, according to updated figures from a study published by Peto …
منابع مشابه
What Really Matters: Living Longer or Living Healthier; Comment on “Shanghai Rising: Health Improvements as Measured by Avoidable Mortality Since 2000”
The decline in Avoidable Mortality (AM) and increase in life expectancy in Shanghai is impressive. Gusmano and colleagues suggested that Shanghai’s improved health system has contributed significantly to this decline in AM. However, when compared to other global cities, Shanghai’s life expectancy at birth is improving as London and New York City, but has yet to surpass that of Hong Kong, Tokyo,...
متن کاملMortality and smoking in Hong Kong: case-control study of all adult deaths in 1998.
OBJECTIVE To assess the mortality currently associated with smoking in Hong Kong, and, since cigarette consumption reached its peak 20 years earlier in Hong Kong than in mainland China, to predict mortality in China 20 years hence. DESIGN Case-control study. Past smoking habits of all Chinese adults in Hong Kong who died in 1998 (cases) were sought from those registering the death. SETTING ...
متن کاملMortality and smoking in Hong Kong: case-control study
Objective To assess the mortality currently associated with smoking in Hong Kong, and, since cigarette consumption reached its peak 20 years earlier in Hong Kong than in mainland China, to predict mortality in China 20 years hence. Design Case-control study. Past smoking habits of all Chinese adults in Hong Kong who died in 1998 (cases) were sought from those registering the death. Setting All ...
متن کاملEducational Values and the English Language Curriculum in Hong Kong Secondary Schools Since 1975
English is an important language in Hong Kong, an international city located on the southern coast of the People’s Republic of China that, for over 150 years to 1997, was a British colony. This paper describes and analyses changes in teaching methodologies in the English language curriculum formally proposed for Hong Kong junior secondary schools from 1975 to the present day, to study how the c...
متن کاملLearning from SARS in Hong Kong and Toronto.
THE RECURRENCE OF SEVERE ACUTE RESPIRATORY SYNdrome (SARS) in China during 2004 has highlighted the continuing threat to human health from infectious disease outbreaks. A zoonosis caused by a novel coronavirus, SARS first emerged among humans in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong during November 2002. By March 2003, SARS had spread to neighboring Hong Kong and from there to Toronto, Ont...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Bulletin of the World Health Organization
دوره 79 10 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2001