Climatic and community sociodemographic factors associated with remote Indigenous Australian smoking rates: an ecological study of health audit data.
Suzanne Jane CarrollMichael J DaleRoss BailieMark DanielPublished in: BMJ open (2019)
Smoking rates in Australian remote Indigenous communities are universally high. Smoking rates are associated with greater community-level socioeconomic status and size, most likely reflecting greater means of accessing tobacco with mass of smokers sufficient to sustain a normative influence. Severe heat was also associated with high smoking rates suggesting such a stressor might support smoking as a coping mechanism. Community sociodemographic and climatic factors bear consideration as context-level correlates of community smoking rates.