Extended Data Fig. 2: Prevalence of current smoking for men (a) and women (b) aged 15 to 29 years old (age-standardized) in 2017. | Nature Medicine

Extended Data Fig. 2: Prevalence of current smoking for men (a) and women (b) aged 15 to 29 years old (age-standardized) in 2017.

From: The effects of tobacco control policies on global smoking prevalence

Extended Data Fig. 2

Age-standardized smoking prevalence (%) estimates from the 2017 Global Burden of Disease Study for men (a) and women (b) aged 15–29 years old for 195 countries. Smoking is defined as current use of any type of smoked tobacco product. Details on the estimation process can be found in the Methods section and elsewhere3.

Source data

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