Skip Navigation
Skip to contents

Epidemiol Health : Epidemiology and Health

OPEN ACCESS
SEARCH
Search

Author index

Page Path
HOME > Browse articles > Author index
Search
Hai-Rim Shin 2 Articles
Preventable cancer cases and deaths attributable to tobacco smoking in Korea from 2015 to 2030
Soseul Sung, Jihye An, Jeehi Jung, Hyeon Sook Lee, Sungji Moon, Inah Kim, Jung Eun Lee, Aesun Shin, Sun Ha Jee, Sun-Seog Kweon, Min-Ho Shin, Sangmin Park, Seung-Ho Ryu, Sun Young Yang, Seung Ho Choi, Jeongseon Kim, Sang-Wook Yi, Yoon-Jung Choi, Youjin Hong, Sangjun Lee, Woojin Lim, Kyungsik Kim, Daehee Kang, Keun-Young Yoo, Sohee Park, Jeong-Soo Im, Hong Gwan Seo, Hai-Rim Shin, Kwang-Pil Ko, Sue K. Park
Epidemiol Health. 2025;e2025008.   Published online February 27, 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4178/epih.e2025008    [Accepted]
  • 446 View
  • 25 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
Tobacco smoking is a major public health concern worldwide. This study aimed to assess its impact on cancer incidence and mortality by estimating the population attributable fraction (PAF) in the Korean population for 2015 and 2020 and by projecting future trends until 2030.
METHODS
The Korean relative risk (RR) was calculated via a meta–analysis of RRs for individual cancers attributed to tobacco smoking, based on primary data analysis from the Korean Cohort Consortium. The PAF was estimated using the Levin formula with past and current prevalence rates and the number of cancer cases and deaths, assuming a 15–year latency period.
RESULTS
The proportions of cancer cases and deaths in Korea attributable to tobacco smoking were similar to those calculated using Asian and global RRs for both men and women. In 2015 and 2020, tobacco smoking contributed to 14.32% and 13.17% of cancer cases and 21.70% and 20.69% of cancer deaths in adults, respectively. Among Koreans, smoking was responsible for 25.83% of new cancer cases in men in 2015, 23.49% in men in 2020, 1.46% in women in 2015, and 1.68% in women in 2020. In both years, smoking impacted mortality more strongly than incidence in Korean men and women (incidence in men: 25.83% and 23.49%; mortality in men: 32.09% and 30.41%; incidence in women: 1.46% and 1.68%; and mortality in women: 4.70% and 4.96%, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS
Tobacco smoking causes cancers and deaths in Korea, however, it is preventable. Effective control policies that consider trends and vulnerabilities among women are required.
Summary
WHO Western Pacific regional action plan for the prevention and control of NCDs (2014-2020)
Hai-Rim Shin, Cherian Varghese
Epidemiol Health. 2014;36:e2014007.   Published online July 22, 2014
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4178/epih/e2014007
  • 24,179 View
  • 173 Download
  • 11 Web of Science
  • 14 Crossref
PDF
Abstract
Summary

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Tobacco-related lung cancer burden in the Western Pacific Region from 1990 to 2021: An age-period-cohort analysis from the Global Burden of Disease Study
    Rui Wang+, Zhiqiang Zhang+, Xiaoxi Shan+, Jiayang Dong, Xinyue Yang, Jing zhang, Jie Cao
    Tobacco Induced Diseases.2025; 23(March): 1.     CrossRef
  • The cardiovascular disease burden attributable to low physical activity in the Western Pacific Region, 1990–2019: an age–period–cohort analysis of the Global Burden of Disease study
    Zeye Liu, Ziping Li, Jing Xie, Ruibing Xia, Yakun Li, Fengwen Zhang, Wenbin Ouyang, Shouzheng Wang, Xiangbin Pan
    European Heart Journal - Quality of Care and Clinical Outcomes.2024; 10(3): 203.     CrossRef
  • Impact of COVID-19 on risks and deaths of non-communicable diseases in the Western Pacific region
    Xiaoyue Xu, Zumin Shi, Lihui Zhou, Jing Lin, Evan Atlantis, Xinguang Chen, Akhtar Hussain, Youfa Wang, Yaogang Wang
    The Lancet Regional Health - Western Pacific.2024; 43: 100795.     CrossRef
  • Associations between leisure-time physical activity and the prevalence and incidence of osteoporosis disease: Cross-sectional and prospective findings from the UK biobank
    Yuanyuan Cao, Yulian Hu, Fang Lei, Xingyuan Zhang, Weifang Liu, Xuewei Huang, Tao Sun, Lijin Lin, Maolin Yi, Yuping Li, Jinpeng Zhang, Yaping Li, Guoping Wang, Zhonghua Cheng
    Bone.2024; 187: 117208.     CrossRef
  • Addressing India’s alcohol misuse crisis: The urgent need for screening and brief intervention to bridge the healthcare gap
    Abhishek Ghosh
    Indian Journal of Psychiatry.2024; 66(10): 887.     CrossRef
  • Punching up the Fun: A Comparison of Enjoyment and In-Task Valance in Virtual Reality Boxing and Treadmill Running
    Daniel R. Greene, Kathryn M. Rougeau
    Psychology International.2024; 6(4): 842.     CrossRef
  • Time trend of pancreatic cancer mortality in the Western Pacific Region: age-period-cohort analysis from 1990 to 2019 and forecasting for 2044
    Wenkai Jiang, Caifei Xiang, Yan Du, Xiao Li, Xin Li, Wence Zhou
    BMC Cancer.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Physical activity and sitting time in occupational groups from Papua New Guinea
    Bronwyn K. Clark, Priya Karthikeyan, Emily Barnabas, Nicholas D. Gilson
    International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health.2022; 95(3): 621.     CrossRef
  • Takore i te Kai Ava’ava (Quit smoking), a mCessation Program Adapted for the Cook Islands: Indicators of Potential for Tobacco Control
    Teinatangi Ringi, Josephine Aumea Herman, Maina Tairi, Rosie Dobson, Vili Nosa, Robyn Whittaker, Judith McCool
    Asia Pacific Journal of Public Health.2021; 33(6-7): 714.     CrossRef
  • Greater central adiposity resulting from increased market integration is associated with elevated C-reactive protein levels in older women from the Republic of Vanuatu
    Hayley Mann, Alysa Pomer, Kathryn Olszowy, Cheng Sun, Harold Silverman, Kelsey Dancause, Chim Chan, Len Tarivonda, George Taleo, Akira Kaneko, Charles Weitz, Ralph Garruto, Jefrey Lum
    Human Biology and Public Health.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The Effects of Maternal and Postnatal Dietary Methyl Nutrients on Epigenetic Changes that Lead to Non-Communicable Diseases in Adulthood
    Raniru S. Randunu, Robert F. Bertolo
    International Journal of Molecular Sciences.2020; 21(9): 3290.     CrossRef
  • Cost-effective programs for the noncommunicable diseases prevention. Part 2: level of community, family and medical specialist
    O. S. Kobyakova, R. D. Malykh, E. S. Kulikov, I. A. Deev, E. A. Starovoytova, N. A. Kirillova, M. A. Balaganskaya, T. A. Zagromova
    "Arterial’naya Gipertenziya" ("Arterial Hypertension").2020; 26(2): 146.     CrossRef
  • Participants and developers experiences with a chronic pain self-management intervention under development: A qualitative study
    Kjersti Grønning, Torunn Hatlen Nøst, Toril Rannestad, Ola Bratås
    SAGE Open Medicine.2018;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Monitoring targets and indicators for the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases in Korea
    Soon Young Lee
    Epidemiology and Health.2015; 37: e2015023.     CrossRef

Epidemiol Health : Epidemiology and Health
TOP