Tobacco use in Vietnam. Prevalence, predictors, and the role of the transnational tobacco corporations
C. N. Jenkins, P. X. Dai, D. H. Ngoc, H. V. Kinh, T. T. Hoang, S. Bales, S. Stewart and S. J. McPhee
Vietnamese Community Health Promotion Project, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco 94104, USA. chrisj@itsa.ucsf.edu
OBJECTIVE: To describe tobacco use in Vietnam and the impact of
transnational tobacco corporations there. DESIGN: In cities, a multistage
cluster design; in communes, a systematic sample design, using face-to-face
interviews in all sites. SETTING: Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and 2 rural
communes in Vietnam. PARTICIPANTS: Random samples totaling 2004 men and
women aged 18 years or older. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Prevalence and
correlates of tobacco smoking, amount and duration of smoking, age at
initiation, quitting behavior, knowledge of health hazards of and attitudes
toward smoking, and cigarette brand smoked, preferred, and recognized as
most widely advertised. RESULTS: Smoking prevalence among men (n=970) was
72.8% and 4.3% among women (n=1031). Male smokers had smoked a mean of 15.5
years; the median age at initiation was 19.5 years. Among male smokers, 16%
smoked non-Vietnamese cigarettes. More than twice as many (38%), however,
said that they would prefer to smoke a non-Vietnamese brand if they could
afford the cost. Among those who recalled any cigarette advertising (38%),
71% recalled a non-Vietnamese brand as the most commonly advertised. Male
smokers who were significantly more likely to smoke non-Vietnamese brands
lived in the south, were engaged in blue collar or business/service
occupations, earned higher incomes, and lived in urban areas. CONCLUSIONS:
Vietnam has the highest reported male smoking prevalence rate in the world.
Unless forceful steps are taken to reduce smoking among men and prevent the
uptake of smoking by youth and women, Vietnam will face a tremendous health
and economic burden in the near future. Implementation of a comprehensive
national tobacco control campaign together with international regulation
will be the keys to the eradication of the tobacco epidemic in Vietnam and
throughout the developing world.
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