Journal of Pharmacy and Bioallied Sciences (Jan 2021)

A cross-sectional study to assess factors that determine tobacco habit initialization and cessation and oral cancer awareness among general population of Vikarabad District, Telangana

  • Hariprasad Gone,
  • Nishath Sayed Abdul,
  • Manish Pisarla,
  • Karuparty Pavan Kumar,
  • Ganesh Kulkarni,
  • Rithesh Kumar Audurthi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jpbs.jpbs_312_21
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
pp. 1613 – 1619

Abstract

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Aims: The aim of the study was to assess factors that determine tobacco habit initialization and cessation and oral cancer awareness among the general population of Vikarabad district, Telangana. Materials and Methods: The current study was a cross-sectional study conducted among the general population of the Vikarabad district. All tobacco users satisfying inclusion criteria of age 18–40 years and at least 1 year of tobacco usage were included in the study. Multistage random sampling was followed to select tobacco users and structured, pretested questionnaires were distributed. The populations mean age was 30 years with majority being rural residents and men contributing the majority of the study population. Results: The mean age at which a person begins to smoke was 20.4 ± 5.7 years among the general population. Peer influence (77%) was reported as one of the major reasons, and habit formation was found to be the major factor (55.6%) for continuing tobacco and also work stress (17%) and relaxation (17%). The primary reason for quitting was fear or awareness of the adverse effects of tobacco. Self-abstinence was reported as a predominant method that they followed to quit tobacco habit during the past year, while 16.3% reported that they did not give it a try. About 58.6% of participants were advised by a health-care provider to quit tobacco, respectively. A major proportion of tobacco users (71%) knew that tobacco causes oral cancer. Half of the study population is unaware of oral cancer's early symptoms, noncontagious progression, lifestyle modification, and early treatment have a good prognosis. Conclusion: Findings of the study highlight the factors to be considered in framing effective antitobacco policies applicable to the rural population.

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