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The European Journal of Public Health 1996 6(3):196-202; doi:10.1093/eurpub/6.3.196
© 1996 by European Journal of Public Health
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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Tobacco smoking, an independent determinant for unhealthy diet?

A cross-sectional study of Norwegian workers on platforms in the North Sea

ARNE OSHAUG, CHRISTINE HELLE BJØNNES, KARI H. BUGGE and KERSTIN U. TRYGG

Nordic School of Nutrition, University of Oslo Norway
Section for Dietary Research, Institute for Nutrition Research, University of Oslo Norway

Correspondence: Arne Oshaug. Associate Professor, Nordic School of Nutrition, P.O. Box 1046 Blindern, 0316 Oslo, Norway, tel. +47 22 851379, fax +47 22 851341

The objective of the study was to examine whether male tobacco smokers had a more unhealthy diet than non-smokers. Data on smoking and other variables were collected by questionnaire interviews and food intake by one 24 h recall. The setting was 2 oll platforms. The participants were 310 healthy men working on 2 platforms in the Norwegian sector of the North Sea. The mean ages were 37 and 39 years for non-smokers and smokers. The prevalence of smoking was 50.3%. Smoking decreased with increasing level of education, but increased with degree of urbanization. Smokers consumed less vegetables, fruit and fish, but more meat, soft drinks containing sugar and more coffee than non-smokers. Smokers had a higher intake of fat and a lower intake of carbohydrate, vitamins A, D and C and dietary fibre. Smoking was an independent predictor for increasing the consumption of coffee and high intake of energy, energy from fat and cholesterol and a decreasing consumption of vegetables, fruit, energy from carbohydrates, dietary fibre and vitamins A and C. It is concluded that smokers had a more unhealthy diet than non-smokers.

Keywords: oil workers, smoking, diet, North Sea, platforms


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