Abstract

INTRODUCTIONDetrimental effects of secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure are well established; however, data on SHS exposure among adolescents in Kuwait are lacking. Hence, this study sought to estimate the prevalence of household SHS exposure among two samples of adolescents in Kuwait and assess its variation by socioeconomic status and parental education level.METHODSData from two large school-based cross-sectional studies were analyzed. Adolescents attending public middle (n=3864; aged 11–14 years) and high (n=1959; aged 14–19 years) schools throughout Kuwait were enrolled in 2016-2017, and parental self-reported household SHS exposure was ascertained. Associations were assessed using Poisson regression with robust variance estimation, and adjusted prevalence ratios (APRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated.RESULTSOverall, 45.8% (1755/3836; 95% CI: 44.2–47.3%) of the enrolled middle school students and 51.6% (998/1936; 95% CI: 49.3–53.8%) of the enrolled high school students were exposed to household SHS. Among middle and high school students, the prevalence of household SHS exposure increased as maternal/paternal education level and family income decreased. Among middle school students, paternal educational attainment of middle school or less compared to bachelor’s degree or higher was associated with 1.60 times (95% CI: 1.44–1.79) higher household SHS exposure. Similarly, in the sample of middle school students, the prevalence of household SHS exposure significantly increased from 35.8% among children from families reporting the highest household income to 50.5% among children from families with the lowest reported household income (p-trend<0.001).CONCLUSIONSHousehold SHS exposure is substantially high among adolescents in Kuwait. Enrolled adolescents from families with low socioeconomic status or with low parental education level have the highest household SHS exposure. These findings highlight the need for national comprehensive tobacco control policies and increasing parental awareness of the impact of SHS exposure on children.

Highlights

  • Detrimental effects of secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure are well established; data on SHS exposure among adolescents in Kuwait are lacking

  • 3864 middle school students were enrolled, of which 3836 (2154 girls and 1682 boys) participants were analyzed in this report

  • 45.8% (1755/3836; 95% confidence intervals (CIs): 44.2–47.3) of the enrolled middle school students and 51.6% (998/1936; 95% CI: 49.3–53.8) of the enrolled high school students were exposed to household SHS (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Detrimental effects of secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure are well established; data on SHS exposure among adolescents in Kuwait are lacking. Exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS), referred to as passive or environmental tobacco smoke, is associated with detrimental health effects for children and non-smoker adults. It is becoming an indisputable fact that there is no safe level of exposure to SHS1 and that SHS exposure during childhood and adulthood has been linked to mortality in adults who never smoke[2]. Adults exposed to SHS have a higher risk of lung cancer and other cancers in addition to adverse effects on the cardiovascular system including arterial stiffness, atherosclerosis, and endothelial dysfunction[1,4]

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