Patterns of Birth Cohort‒Specific Smoking Histories in Brazil
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American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Abstract
Smoking prevalence has decreased considerably in Brazil from 34.8% in 1989 to
12.6% in 2019 owing to the implementation of strong tobacco control policies. However, recent
data show that the downward trend may be stagnating. Detailed analyses of historical smoking pat terns by birth cohort could guide tobacco control decision making in Brazil.
Methods: Using the 2008 Global Adult Tobacco Survey and the 2013 and 2019 National Health
Surveys, historical smoking patterns in Brazil were estimated, supplemented with data from the
2006‒2019 Surveillance System of Risk Factors for Chronic Diseases by Telephone Interviews.
Age‒period‒cohort models with constrained natural splines were applied to estimate the annual
probabilities of smoking initiation and cessation, current smoker prevalence, and mean cigarettes
smoked per day by age, gender, and birth cohort. Analysis was conducted in 2021‒2022.
Results: Current smoker prevalence has declined considerably since the 1950 and 1955 birth cohorts for
males and females, respectively, reflecting decreased smoking initiation and increased smoking-cessation
probabilities over time. Among female cohorts born on or after 2000, smoking initiation may be increasing
even as their smoking cessation has increased considerably. Mean cigarettes smoked per day has remained
relatively constant across period and cohorts, showing only a minor decrease among males.
Conclusions: These detailed cohort-specific smoking parameters can be used to inform models that
evaluate the impact of tobacco use and policies on long-term health outcomes and guide public health
decision making in Brazil. Stagnant mean cigarettes smoked per day, increasing female smoking initiation,
and limited improvement in male cessation among recent cohorts present challenges to tobacco control.