A new study has shown that people of low social status are more likely to be smokers.
A new study has shown that people of low social status are more likely to be smokers.
In the study, Thomas Lampert, of the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) in Berlin, showed that social status is intimately associated with health-related risk factors such smoking and obesity.The data for his study stemmed from the RKI's Telephone Health Survey.
In interviews conducted with a total of 8318 individuals over a period of 18 years the RKI recorded interviewees' responses to questions regarding current smoking status, degree of physical activity, height, and weight.
The subjects' social status was determined from their statements on education, occupation, and net household income. The analyses were also intended to reveal any age- and sex-specific variations.
Evaluation of the data showed that men of low social status are more likely to be smokers, to be physically inactive, and to be obese.
The same goes for women, with an even stronger link with obesity.
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The study appears in the current issue of Deutsches Arzteblatt International.
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SRM