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Category: 14. Physical health, conventional medicine,
and folk medicine.
SPAN004. Spangler, John G., Robert Michielutte,
Ronny A. Bell, Stanley Knick, Mark B. Dignan, and John H. Summerson. Dual
tobacco use among Native American adults in southeastern North Carolina.
Preventive Medicine 32.6 (2001): 521-528.
Publication type: Journal article
The authors used a telephone survey of 400 adult
Lumbee Indians living in Pembroke, N.C. to determine how many did not use
tobacco at all (60.3%); smoked (26%); used smokeless tobacco (18.5%); or
used both tobacco products (4.8%). The survey also gathered demographic
data and information about respondents' attitudes toward tobacco use. Few
previous studies of dual tobacco use had been conducted; and none of them
looked at adults, were also population-based, and studied Native Americans.
This study had cooperation and support from both the Lumbee
Tribal Council and the Lumbee Regional Development Association. Lengthy
ethnographic interviews with twenty Lumbee community leaders were conducted.
These were analyzed for themes and context by anthropologist Stanley Knick,
and the results were used to develop the 41-item telephone survey.
Statistical analyses of the survey results are presented
in Table 1 (type of tobacco use correlated with age, sex, education, marital
status, number of close friends, number of close relatives, and frequency
of church attendance), Table 2 (daily patterns of tobacco use correlated
with type of tobacco used), and Table 3 (demographic predictors of cigarette
smoking only, smokeless tobacco use only, and use of both products by logical
regression analysis).
Findings of the statistical analyses included a high rate
of dual tobacco users (4.8%), compared to other studies of adult dual tobacco
users; dual users who are intermediate in age between younger cigarette
smokers and older smokeless tobacco users; no predominance of males among
dual users; and dual users having fewer close friends and relatives than
the other tobacco users.
Additional Subjects: Tobacco use | Church attendance | Social
support
This annotation was written on: August 11, 2001; last edited
on June 13, 2002
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