PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Suicide and Other-Cause Mortality after Early Exposure to Smoking and Second Hand Smoking: A 12-Year Population-Based Follow-Up Study.

  • Vincent Chin-Hung Chen,
  • Chian-Jue Kuo,
  • Tsu-Nai Wang,
  • Wen-Chung Lee,
  • Wei J Chen,
  • Cleusa P Ferri,
  • Duujian Tsai,
  • Te-Jen Lai,
  • Meng-Chuan Huang,
  • Robert Stewart,
  • Ying-Chin Ko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. e0130044

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundThe association between smoking and suicide is still controversial, particular for early life cigarette smoking exposure. Few studies have investigated this association in adolescents using population-based cohorts, and the relationship with second hand smoking (SHS) exposure has not been addressed.Methods and findingsIn this study, we followed a large population-based sample of younger people to investigate the association between smoking, SHS exposure and suicide mortality. Between October 1995 and June 1996, 162,682 junior high school students ages 11 to 16 years old living in a geographic catchment area in Taiwan were enrolled and then followed till December 2007 (1,948,432 person-years) through linkage to the National Death Certification System. Participants who were currently smoking at baseline had a greater than six-fold higher suicide mortality than those who did not smoke (29.5 vs. 4.8 per 100,000 person-years, p20 cigarettes/per day. The estimated depression-adjusted odds ratio did not change substantially. The population attributable fractions for suicide associated with smoking and heavy SHS exposure (>20 cigarettes/per day) were 9.6% and 10.6%, respectively.ConclusionsThis study showed evidence of excess suicide mortality among young adults exposed to active or passive early life cigarette smoking.