학술논문

Has the National Fall in Smoking Rates in Ireland Been Replicated in Cancer Patients? A 5-Year Report
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 19(4)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Health Services and Systems
Nursing
Health Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Tobacco
Prevention
Clinical Research
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Cancer
Breast Cancer
Respiratory
Good Health and Well Being
Head and Neck Neoplasms
Humans
Ireland
Smoking
Smoking Cessation
Tobacco Smoking
smoking
prevalence
cancer
patients
Toxicology
Language
Abstract
Smoking among cancer patients leads to poorer outcomes, yet many patients continue smoking. As part of a feasibility study of smoking cessation for cancer patients in Ireland, smoking rates were reviewed. Hospital Inpatient Enquiry (HIPE) data on the smoking status of discharges with a cancer diagnosis (overall, breast, lung, cervical and head and neck cancer) were used (2014-2018). During 2014-2017, current smoking increased for overall (10.5-11.7%) and lung cancer (24.7-27.2%), then decreased to 11.4% and 24.1%, respectively, in 2018. Current smoking increased for cervical during 2014-2018 (11-19.8%) and initially (2014-2016) for head and neck (3-12.7%) cancer, decreasing to 7.6% in 2018; breast cancer was stable at 6 ± 0.6%. These rates are lower than the Irish (23-20%) and European (29% (average)) general population. During 2014-2017, past smoking increased among overall (15.2-21%) and specific cancers, which was lower than the Irish general population (23-28%). Current smoking was highest among 50-59-year-olds (14-16%), which contrasts with the Irish general population (24-35 years at 32-28%). HIPE data are subject to potential duplicate episodes of care and under-documentation of smoking. However, trend analysis is useful, as these limitations should be stable. Rates remain high; therefore, robust documentation and smoking cessation referrals for cancer patients are important.