November 1, 2002
Teen smoking plagues Nunavik
New study finds more
than three of four Nunavik teens smoke daily
An estimated 80
per cent of Nunavik teens are lighting up.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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ODILE
NELSON
A staggering 80 per cent
of Nunaviks adolescents smoke, according to a report released last week
by the Nunavik Regional Board of Health and Social Services.
The proportion could be
the highest in the world for any regionally governed area.
"Right now we know
that in Quebec, a little less than 30 per cent of the population as a whole
smokes. Amongst Nunavik adolescents it is more than double this. At 80 per cent,
well its much more difficult to be higher than that. It would mean almost
everyone is smoking," Dr. Serge Déry, the boards director
of public health, said last week.
Dr. Déry presented
the report, which was derived from a 2001 cross-Nunavik dental hygiene survey,
at the boards annual general meeting in Kuujjuaq last Thursday.
The survey asked 129 adolescents
between 14 and 16 years old if they smoked everyday, how many cigarettes they
smoke each day and how old they were when they began smoking regularly.
It also questioned them
about whether they thought smoking causes gum disease.
The results paint a portrait
of pandemic tobacco use amongst Nunavik adolescents, with 79.8 per cent of adolescents
responding that they smoke, 75 per cent reporting a daily smoking habit and
50 per cent saying they consumed between six and 10 cigarettes a day.
It also found 30 per cent
of adolescents began smoking when they were younger than 10, and that 66 per
cent continue their habit although they know it causes gum disease.
Dr. Déry said the
statistics are disheartening but not surprising.
Tobacco use and the health
problems associated with it have become pervasive in Northern society, he said,
since foreign whalers first began trading tobacco with Nunavimmiut in the 19th
century.
In the mid-1990s, the health
board established an anti-tobacco campaign to help combat the problem. The program
now includes educational brochures, counsellor training and free nicotine-suppression
medications like Zyban for people who want to quit smoking.
But the latest numbers
suggest the campaign has not reduced the number of teenage smokers in Nunavik.
"There is no evidence
that things are improving at all in fact its deteriorating,"
Déry said.
"In the Santé
Quebec survey in 1992 they found people from 15 to 24, approximately 70 per
cent of persons were regular smokers. And in another health survey in the middle
of the 90s they found in 12 and 13 year olds, 68 per cent were current smokers."
Yet Déry does not
believe the growing numbers mean the campaign has been ineffective.
Instead the campaign is
bringing about a necessary shift in the regions attitude towards tobacco
use, he said.
"In Nunavik, smoking
is the norm. Its a question of de-normalizing smoking," he said.
"At the beginning of the 1990s you would have tried to talk about smoking
cessation and you would have been thrown out of many of the communities. The
rates are still very high but the view [of smoking] is changing."
Such an adjustment is necessary,
he said, before the statistics begin to drop.
Catherine Carry, special
projects co-coordinator for the Pauktuutit Inuit Womens Association in
Ottawa, agrees.
Carry has worked closely
with the Nunavik health board and continues to develop anti-smoking campaigns
for the Inuit womens organization.
"Getting youth to
quit is only a part of an entire cessation program. The adults are role models
and so their smoking and attitudes must also be addressed," Carry said.
"You need a systematic, multi-jurisdictional intervention to get young
people to stop smoking."
Déry also said any
complete anti-smoking strategy for the region should be relevant to the community.
The health board plans
to step up its anti-tobacco campaign with counsellors based in each community.
It will also hold a Nunavik version of Quebecs provincial smoking-cessation
contest next March.
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