From: Mortality attributable to tobacco: review of different methods
 | SAM in thousands of deaths (proportion of total adult mortality) | Comments | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Ref | Male | Female | Both | Â |
[19] | 27.600 (26.2%) | 13.170 (13.4%) | 40.770 (20.0%) | SAM as a rate of total death; |
[22] | 16.896 (18.1%) | 7.326 (8.1%) | 24.222 (13.6%) | Mortality estimation according to smoking related disease group in 16 Brazilians cities |
[23] | 3.680 | 2595 | 6.275 (16.3%) | Use of the lagged SAMMEC models |
[24] | 9.890 (17.8%) | 2.725 (5.2%) | 12.615 (11.7%) | Estimation of other tobacco burdens (Dalys, deaths…) |
[25] | 259.5 | 178.5 | 438 | Estimation of annual deaths between1997 and 2001, inclusion of second hand smoking death |
[26] | 16.123 (22.2%) | 2.680 (5.9%) | 18.803 (16.0%) | Take into consideration induction time. |
[32] | 500 (13%) | 100 (3%) | 600 (12%) | Estimation of future burden under scenarios of health promotion |
[33] | - | - | 550 | Estimation of men deaths only |
[36] | 2.534 33% | 0.169 (5%) | 2701 (25%) | Graphic form of data |
[34] | - | - | 20000 (8%) | Deaths estimation by cause: lung cancer, COPD, tuberculosis and vascular deaths. |
[38] | 2410 (14%) | 380 (3%) | 2020 (9%) | Assumes constant worldwide lung cancer mortality rates among never smokers. |
Worldwide use. | ||||
[13] | - | - | 670 (7%) | Estimation of cardio vascular deaths |