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Tob Control 2009;18:92-97 doi:10.1136/tc.2008.026336
  • Research paper

Socioeconomic differences in smoking trends among pregnant women at first antenatal visit in Sweden 1982–2001: increasing importance of educational level for the total burden of smoking

  1. K Moussa1,
  2. P O Östergren1,
  3. M Grahn1,
  4. A E Kunst2,
  5. F Eek3,
  6. B Essén4
  1. 1
    Department of Health Sciences, Division of Social Medicine and Global Health, Lund University, Malmö University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden
  2. 2
    Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  3. 3
    Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Lund University, Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden
  4. 4
    Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, International Maternal and Child Health, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
  1. Kontie Moussa, Lund University, Department of Health Sciences, Division of Social Medicine and Global Health, Malmö University Hospital, SE-20502 Malmö, Sweden; kontie.moussa{at}med.lu.se
  • Received 26 May 2008
  • Accepted 16 October 2008
  • Published Online First 30 October 2008

Abstract

Background: There was a decrease in smoking during early pregnancy in Swedish women between 1982 and 2001. We sought to determine whether there was a parallel decrease in socioeconomic inequality in smoking.

Methods: Registry data indicating educational level and smoking status at first antenatal visit in all 2 022 469 pregnancies in Sweden 1982–2001 were analysed. Prevalence differences, odds ratios based on prevalences and total attributable fractions were compared for five-year intervals.

Results: The prevalence differences of smoking showed a greater decrease at the lowest and middle educational level compared with the highest educational level (14.5%, 15.7% and 10.2%, respectively) indicating reduced inequality in absolute terms. However, odds ratios regarding low educational attainment versus high, increased from 5.6 to 14.2, signifying increased inequality in relative terms. Moreover, the total attributable fraction of low and intermediate educational level regarding smoking at first antenatal visit increased from 61% to 76% during the period studied.

Conclusions: Smoking at first antenatal visit in Sweden between 1982 to 2001 decreased in a way that conclusions regarding trends in inequalities in smoking at first antenatal visit depend on the type of measure applied. However, using the measure of total attributable fraction, which takes into consideration the impact of the exposure on the individual as well as the effect of the varying size of the group of exposed, the growing importance of educational level for the behaviour in the population was demonstrated.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests: None.

  • Funding: This study was made possible by grants from the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research, grant number FAS 2002–0920, an ALF grant from the Medical Faculty of Lund University and “Tackling Socioeconomic Inequalities in Smoking” project funded by European Commission, Public Health Directorate, through the ENSP.

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