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Discrepancies between self-reported smoking and carboxyhemoglobin: An analysis of the second national health and nutrition survey

L.M. Klesges, R.C. Klesges and J.A. Cigrang

American Journal of Public Health, 1992, vol. 82, issue 7, 1026-1029

Abstract: Environmental, self-report, and demographic factors mediated the relationship between self-reported cigarette smoking and carboxyhemoglobin among 2114 smokers and 3918 nonsmokers. Self-reported nonsmokers with carboxyhemoglobin levels between 2% and 3% were more likely to be self- reported ex-smokers, to live in a larger community, and to be younger, less educated, and male than were self-reported nonsmokers with carboxyhemoglobin levels of less than 2%. Self-reported nonsmokers with strong evidence of cigarette consumption (carboxyhemoglobin level > 3%) were more likely to be self-reported ex-smokers, younger, less educated, and non-White than were nonsmokers with carboxyhemoglobin levels of less than 2%.

Date: 1992
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:aph:ajpbhl:1992:82:7:1026-1029_7

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