Abstract
Prevalence, sociodemographic patterns and medical co-morbidity of smoking among a cross-section of primary health care (PHC) clients in Saudi Arabia were examined. We used a 44-item semi-structured questionnaire to collect data from 1752 patients at 25 randomly selected PHG centres. Percentage of smoking was 52.3%. Although 85% were adult smokers, 8.6% began smoking before age 12. Smokers gave overlapping reasons to smoke including peer pressure; non-smokers gave religious and health logics against smoking. Of all smokers, 92.8% wanted to learn cessation strategies, 11.8% were ignorant of hazards and 32.4% reported manifestations of nicotine withdrawal. Besides alcohol use (13.4%), 81.8% had co-morbid physical disease.
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CITATION STYLE
Al-Haddad, N. S., Al-Habeeb, T. A., Abdelgadir, M. H., Al-Ghamdy, Y. S., & Qureshi, N. A. (2003). Smoking patterns among primary health care attendees, Al-Qassim region, Saudi Arabia. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 9(5–6), 911–922. https://doi.org/10.26719/2003.9.5-6.911
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