§ Mr. Peter BottomleyTo ask the Secretary of State for Health if he will list the absolute changes in the incidence of(a) smoking and (b) smoking-related diseases by socio-economic classification in the past 20 years. [28816]
§ Ms JowellInformation about the prevalence of smoking by socio-economic group between 1976 and 1996 is given in reports on the General Household Survey (GHS)1. Information for 1996 is given in the table.
Data on the incidence of all smoking-related diseases by socio-economic group are either not available centrally or could be provided only at disproportionate cost, however information on the incidence of lung cancer, one smoking-related disease, by social class between 1976 and 1989 has been published in "Population Tends 90"2.
Data on "deaths" from some smoking-related diseases (for example, lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease) by social class have been published in "Health Inequalities'.
709W1 Office for National Statistics. Living in Britain—Results from the 1994 General Household Survey, HMSO, London (1996).2 Office for National Statistics, Incidence of Health of the Nation cancers by social class. Population Trends 90. The Stationery Office, London (1997).3 Office for National Statistics. Health Inequalities—Decennial Supplement: DS15. The Stationery Office, London (1997).
Cigarette smoking amongst adults, by socio-economic group, and sex. Great Britain, 1996 Percentage Men Women Non-manual Professional 12 11 Employers and managers 20 18 Intermediate and junior non-manual 24 28 Total non-manual 21 22 Manual Skilled manual and own account non-professional 32 30 Semi-skilled manual and personal service 41 36 Unskilled manual 41 36 Total manual 36 33 All aged 16 and over 29 28 Notes:
1. Percentages rounded to the nearest whole figure.
2. Socio-economic group is coded according to the present job of those currently working and to the last job of those not currently working. Married women whose husbands were in the household are classified according to their husband's occupation. Members of the armed forces, persons in inadequately described occupations and all persons who have never worked have not been shown as separate categories but are included in the figures shown as totals.
Source:
ONS General Household Survey
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