Mortality Attributable to Tobacco Consumption in the Province of Buenos Aires. Estimation from the National Surveys of Risk Factors

pp. 187-194

Authors

  • Andrés G. Bolzan Dirección de Epidemiología y control de brotes. Ministerio de Salud de la Provincia de Buenos Aires
  • Hanna Fritz Heck Department of Epidemiology and Control of Outbreaks. Ministry of Health of the Province of Buenos Aires. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2836-5218
  • Silvia Rey Provincial Tobacco Control Program. Ministry of Health of the Province of Buenos Aires

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7775/rac.v91.i3.20630

Keywords:

Tobacco , Mortality , Attributable Risk

Abstract

Background: Tobacco consumption is the leading cause of death from non-communicable diseases, such as heart disease, lung disease and cancer. Estimating prevalence-based mortality attributed to tobacco consumption is  based on prior knowledge of the number of smokers, ex-smokers, and non-smokers in the population. These data derive from the four National Surveys
of Risk Factors (Encuestas Nacionales de Factores de Riesgo, ENFR).
Objectives: This study aims to show the burden of mortality due to tobacco consumption in the Province of Buenos Aires in the assessed periods of the four ENFRs (2005, 2009, 2013, 2018).
Methods: Mortality attributable to tobacco consumption was estimated by using a prevalence-based method and assuming
the risks associated with smoking in the 19 causes classified as associated with smoking, in accordance with the Cancer Prevention Study II (CPSII). The deaths were grouped into periods equivalent to those relevant to each ENFR. The CSPII attributable fractions were then applied by estimating the absolute deaths and attributable fractions of mortality by cause and groupings: tumours, circulatory diseases and respiratory diseases.
Results: Overall, in persons aged 18 years or older, there was a decrease in smoking prevalence from 29.5% in 2005 to 23.1%
in 2018 (an absolute reduction of 6.4% and a percentage reduction of 21.7%). A total of 6293 out of 18 255 deaths from cardiovascular
diseases in the four surveys were attributed to smoking, that is, 34.4%, compared to 68% of deaths from tumours and 40.0% of deaths from respiratory diseases.
Conclusion: It is necessary to further strengthen measures to reduce exposure to tobacco.

How to cite this article:

Bolzán AG, Fritz Heck Hanna, Rey S. Mortality Attributable to Tobacco Consumption in the Province of Buenos Aires. Estimation from the National Surveys of Risk Factors. Rev Argent Cardiol 2023;91:187-94. http://dx.doi.org/10.7775/rac.v91.i3.20630

Published

2023-07-12

Issue

Section

ORIGINAL ARTICLES