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Tobacco Use Among Women – An Increasing Concern in India

While an average male smokes 6.1 cigarettes a day, a woman smokes an average of 7 cigarettes per day.

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According to studies, India now has 12.1 million women smokers and only lags behind the United States in this segment.

While an average male smokes 6.1 cigarettes a day, a woman smokes an average of 7 cigarettes per day!

And this is only the tip of the iceberg. Rural women consume tobacco in various forms – dental paste, bidis, hookah and masheri powder which they rub on their teeth and inside of the mouth, to energize them to work in the fields, manage their children and their husbands.

The Dangerous Case of Second-Hand Smoking

Second-hand smoke is a mixture of sidestream and mainstream smoke. The smoke which comes from the burning end of a cigarette is termed as sidestream smoke and the smoke that is exhaled by the smoker is mainstream smoke.

Being exposed to second-hand smoke affects an adult’s heart and blood vessels directly. Adult nonsmokers who live with smokers are at about 25 percent more risk of developing heart disease.

Sidestream smoke makes up about 85 percent of second-hand smoke, which consists of different chemicals than exhaled mainstream smoke. It burns at a lower temperature, and the burn is not as clean or complete. Hence increasing the possibility of lung cancer even in non-smokers.

Exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke can cause serious and fatal diseases in adults and children.

Smoking and exposure to second-hand smoke during pregnancy increases the risk of health and behavioral problems in the newborns, which includes:

  • Abnormal blood pressure in infants and children
  • Cleft palate and lip
  • Leukemia
  • Infantile colic
  • Childhood wheezing
  • Respiratory disorders
  • Eye problems
  • Attention deficit disorder

It’s also a significant cause of miscarriages and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) after birth.

Infants of mothers who smoke during and after pregnancy are 3 to 4 times more likely to die from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) than babies of non-smoking mothers. This indicates that there is a direct impact of tobacco on the infant mortality rate.

Research has revealed that smoking causes infertility as it harms the eggs in women and sperms in men.

Yes, Third-Hand Smoking Is Also a Thing

When tobacco burns, it releases nicotine in the form of a vapour. This vapour attaches to surfaces like walls, floors, carpets, drapes, and furniture.

Children are more sensitive to being exposed to third-hand smoke because they breathe, crawl on, play on, touch, and even taste (because they often put their hands in their mouths) surfaces contaminated with tobacco residue.

Hence, second-hand smoke and third-hand smoke are equally dangerous as they contain more than 7000 chemicals, of which hundreds are harmful and about 70 can cause cancer.

This shows that there is an urgency to control the consumption of tobacco and the target population must also include adolescent girls, pregnant women and older women.

Smokeless Tobacco a Bigger Problem in India?

According to Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS), India has an alarmingly high rate of tobacco consumption. Almost 275 million Indian adults, that is nearly 35% of the population, consume some form of tobacco.

GATS findings related to tobacco use among women are:

  • 20.3 % of adult women use tobacco products
  • Over 90% women tobacco users consume smokeless tobacco (a large number of these users are in the reproductive age group)
  • The average age at initiation of tobacco use was 17.8 years with 25.8 percent of females starting tobacco use before the age of 15

Apart from cigarette, smokeless tobacco can also be dangerous for human life. India has a long history of using smokeless tobacco products as it is the most dominant format in India.

It is a form of tobacco which is consumed without burning, it is consumed by chewing. Most people chew or suck the tobacco in their mouth and spit out the tobacco juices that build up. There are several types of tobacco available in India; the most prominent ones are gutkha, zarda, khaini, masheri and mawa.

The Perils of Smoking for Mothers and Babies

Maternal health effects of smoking:

  • Impaired lactation
  • Miscarriage
  • Premature birth
  • Ectopic pregnancy
  • Placental abnormalities
  • Bleeding
  • Premature rupture of membranes

Smoking also adversely affects the foetus which can be dangerous, as it may lead to:

  • Fetal growth retardation
  • Small for gestational age
  • Increased fetal heart rate
  • Chronic fetal hypoxia
  • Perinatal death
  • Preterm delivery
  • Low birth weight
  • Fetal artery constriction
  • Lessened amounts of oxygen and nutrients in the foetus

(Dr Duru Shah is the Director, Gynaecworld, Center for Assisted Reproduction and Women’s Health. The views expressed above are the author’s own. FIT neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)

(For more stories on women’s health, follow FIT.)

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