Aims: This study examined the association of tobacco consumption (smoking and chewing) with illicit drug use among Bangladesh males.
Design: Cross-sectional survey data from the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2004 were used.
Setting: Bangladesh.
Participants: A total of 4297 males aged 15-54 years.
Measurements: Age, education, religion, marital status, place of residence; tobacco consumption such as cigarette and bidi smoking, chewing sada, pata, tobacco leaves, gul, betel quid with zarda; taking illicit drugs such as ganja, charas, heroin, pethedine, phensidyl; having sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
Findings: Overall prevalence of tobacco consumption was 59%. Bidi smoking (29.6%), cigarette smoking (27.8%) and chewing betel quid with tobacco/zarda (17.5%) were predominant. Overall prevalence of illicit drug use was 4%. Ganja was the main drug (3%), followed by phensidyl (0.8%), heroin (0.3%) and charas (0.3%). Age, education, place of residence, marital status, having STDs, premarital and extra-marital sex were associated significantly with tobacco smoking. Almost all variables were also associated significantly with illicit drug use. Smoking cigarettes and bidi and eating tobacco leaves/shada pata/gul showed significantly positive associations with illicit drug use when adjusted for other variables.
Conclusions: Tobacco consumption is common and associated positively with the illicit drug use among males in Bangladesh.