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Volume 3

Dentistry and Craniofacial Research

ISSN: 2576-392X

Page 59

JOINT EVENT

August 16-17, 2018 Madrid, Spain

&

24

th

International Conference on

Dental Public Health & Dental Hygiene

3

rd

International Conference on

General Practice & Primary Care

General Practice 2018

Dental Public Health 2018

August 16-17, 2018

Substance use and misuse by high-risk adolescents: A vulnerability evaluation

Azmina Hussain

1

, Sidra Zaheer

1

and

Kashif Shafique

1,2

1

Dow University of Health Sciences, Pakistan

2

University of Glasgow, UK

Background:

Both 600 million consuming betel quid (BQ) and growing smokeless tobacco (SLT) use in South Asian countries

are mounting public health concern. This substance consumption is proven risk factor for oral cancer. Adolescents formulate

high-risk group for its use as habit commences at an age as early as 13 years. We aimed to observe determinants of SLT and/or

BQ use to identify the fundamental influencers of its consumption in adolescents.

Methods:

This was a cross-sectional analysis of 2140 adolescents of secondary schools of Karachi, Pakistan. SLT and/or BQ

consumption was the main outcome variable. After adjusting for other determinants, both univariate and multivariate binary

logistic analyses were used to report outcome as both crude and adjusted odds ratio with 95% confidence interval. The p-value

was set to be significant at <0.05 for all analyses.

Results:

The overall use prevalence of SLT and/or BQ consumption was 42.6% (n=912). There were more male users than

females. A substantial percentage of users (61.2%) were from co-education schools. Students whose peers used SLT and/

or BQ were six times more likely to use them (OR=6.79, 95% CI 4.67–9.87, p-value<0.001). The use of SLT and/or BQ by

parents made adolescents’ use more probable (OR=2.16, 95% CI 1.73–2.65, p-value<0.001). Students who never attended any

awareness session regarding the harmful effects of SLT and/or BQ were more likely users. The availability of these products

with outside hawkers increased the odds of it use by six times amongst youth.

Conclusion:

The use of SLT and/or BQ use by peers and parents, students studying in co-education, lack of awareness sessions

based on deleterious effects of the product and the easy access to the product from outside school hawkers, all play positive

contributing role towards increased risk of SLT and/or BQ use in high-risk youth.

Azmina.hussain@duhs.edu.pk

J Dent Craniofac Res 2018, Volume 3

DOI: 10.21767/2576-392X-C2-006