Abstract

BackgroundSmoking is associated with disadvantage. As people with lower social status reside in less privileged areas, the extent of contextual influences for smoking remains unclear. The aims were to examine the spatial patterning of daily smoking within the city of Helsinki, to analyse whether contextual variation can be observed and which spatial factors associate with current daily smoking in the employed female population.MethodsData from a cross-sectional questionnaire were collected for municipal employees of Helsinki (aged 40–60 years). The response rate was 69%. As almost 4/5 of the employees are females, the analyses were restricted to women (n = 5028). Measures included smoking status, individual level socio-demographic characteristics (age, occupational social class, education, family type) and statistical data describing areas in terms of social structure (unemployment rate, proportion of manual workers) and social cohesion (proportions of single parents and single households). Logistic multilevel analysis was used to analyse data.ResultsAfter adjusting for the individual-level composition, smoking was significantly more prevalent according to all social structural and social cohesion indicators apart from the proportion of manual workers. For example, high unemployment in the area of domicile increased the risk of smoking by almost a half. The largest observed area difference in smoking – 8 percentage points – was found according to the proportion of single households.ConclusionThe large variation in smoking rates between areas appears mainly to result from variation in the characteristics of residents within areas. Yet, living in an area with a high level of unemployment appears to be an additional risk for smoking that cannot be fully accounted for by individual level characteristics even in a cohort of female municipal employees.

Highlights

  • The large variation in smoking rates between areas appears mainly to result from variation in the characteristics of residents within areas

  • Living in an area with a high level of unemployment appears to be an additional risk for smoking that cannot be fully accounted for by individual level characteristics even in a cohort of female municipal employees

  • Daily smoking was patterned by area so that it was most prevalent in the second most deprived quartile according to all other indicators except for the proportion of manual workers

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Summary

Introduction

As people with lower social status reside in less privileged areas, the extent of contextual influences for smoking remains unclear. Smoking is increasingly associated with many markers of deprivation at the individual level. This research suggests that smoking is influenced by collective factors such as neighbourhood of residence [10,11], workplace [12] and school environment among young people [13,14]. Most studies suggest a moderate positive association between area deprivation and smoking after controlling for individual-level social composition [26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35]

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