Areca (betel) nut chewing practices of adults and health behaviors of their children in the Freely Associated States, Micronesia: Findings from the Children's Healthy Living (CHL) Program

Yvette C Paulino, Reynolette Ettienne, Rachel Novotny, Lynne R Wilkens, Moria Shomour, Cecilia Sigrah, Shelley D Remengesau, Emihner L Johnson, Julia M Alfred, Daisy F Gilmatam, Yvette C Paulino, Reynolette Ettienne, Rachel Novotny, Lynne R Wilkens, Moria Shomour, Cecilia Sigrah, Shelley D Remengesau, Emihner L Johnson, Julia M Alfred, Daisy F Gilmatam

Abstract

Background: Chewing areca (betel) nut has been deemed carcinogenic. The practice has become a public health concern in Micronesia. The Children's Healthy Living (CHL) Program included an areca (betel) nut questionnaire in a survey of household characteristics in the Freely Associated States (FAS). This paper describes areca (betel) nut chewing practices of adults and the health behaviors of their children.

Methods: A cross-section of 1200 children (2-8 year-olds) and their caregivers in Chuuk, Kosrae, Pohnpei, Republic of Palau, Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), and Yap were recruited. Socio-demographics, adult areca (betel) nut chewing practices, and other health behaviors of children and adults were assessed. Child anthropometric measurements were collected to estimate weight status.

Results: The FAS areca (betel) nut chewing prevalence was 42%, ranging from 3% (RMI) to 94% (Yap). Among chewers, 84% added tobacco, 97% added slaked lime, 85% added betel leaf, and 24% mixed the components with alcohol. Among FAS children, 95% practiced daily teeth-brushing and 53% visited the dentist annually. Compared to non-chewing households, areca (betel) nut chewing households were more likely to have very young children enrolled, more highly educated adults, and members that used tobacco and alcohol.

Conclusion: The FAS areca (betel) nut chewing prevalence (42%) is above the world prevalence of 10-20%, with wide variability across the islands. The oral health findings in this study may inform future oral cancer prevention programs or policies. Regular monitoring of areca (betel) nut use is needed to measure the impact of such programs or policies.

Keywords: Alcohol; Areca; Betel; CHL; Childhood obesity; Micronesia; Oral cancer; Tobacco.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of interest

LRW received financial support from USDA NIFA-AFRI-003037 to complete work on this study. All other authors have no conflicts to disclose.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

References

    1. IARC, Betel-quid and areca-nut chewing and some areca-nut derived nitrosamines, IARC Monogr. Eval. Carcinog. Risks Hum 85 (2004) 1–334.
    1. Sullivan RJ, Allen JS, Otto C, Tiobech J, Nero K, Effects of chewing betel nut (Areca catechu) on the symptoms of people with schizophrenia in Palau, Micronesia, Br. J. Psychiatry 177 (2000) 174–178.
    1. Sullivan S, Andres C, Otto W, Miles R, The effects of an indigenous muscarinic drug, Betel nut (Areca catechu), on the symptoms of schizophrenia: a longitudinal study in Palau, Micronesia, Am. J. Psychiatry 164 (4) (2007) 670–673.
    1. Yamada T, Hara K, Kadowaki T, Chewing betel quid and the risk of metabolic disease, cardiovascular disease, and all-cause mortality: a meta-analysis, PLoS One 8 (8) (2013) e70679.
    1. Garg A, Chaturvedi P, Gupta PC, A review of the systemic adverse effects of areca nut or betel nut, Ind. J. Med. Paediatr. Oncol 35 (1) (2014) 3–9.
    1. Gupta PC, Warnakulasuriya S, Global epidemiology of areca nut usage, Addict. Biol 7 (1) (2002) 77–83.
    1. Gupta PC, Ray CS, Epidemiology of betel quid usage, Ann. Acad. Med. Singapore 33 (Suppl. 4) (2004) 31–36.
    1. Paulino YC, Novotny R, Miller MJ, Murphy SP, Areca (Betel) nut chewing practices in micronesian populations, Hawaii J. Public Health 3 (1) (2011) 19–29.
    1. Staples G, Bevacqua R, Areca Catechu (Betel Nut Palm), Traditional Trees of Pacific Islands: Their Culture, Environment, and Use, Permanent Agriculture Resources, Honolulu, Hawaii, 2006.
    1. WHO, Review of Areca (betel) Nut and Tobacco Use in the Pacific: A Technical Report, WHO Regional Office for the Western Pacific, Manila, Philippines, 2012.
    1. Paulino YC, Hurwitz EL, Warnakulasuriya S, Gatewood RR, Pierson KD, Tenorio LF, Novotny R, Palafox NA, Wilkens LR, Badowski G, Screening for oral potentially malignant disorders among areca (betel) nut chewers in Guam and Saipan, BMC Oral Health 14 (2014) 151.
    1. Oakley E, Demaine L, Warnakulasuriya S, Areca (betel) nut chewing habit among high-school children in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (Micronesia), Bull. World Health Organ 83 (9) (2005) 656–660.
    1. Herzog TA, Murphy KL, Little MA, Suguitan GS, Pokhrel P, Kawamoto CT, The betel quid dependence scale: replication and extension in a Guamanian sample, Drug Alcohol Depend. 138 (2014) 154–160.
    1. Berger KE, Masterson J, Mascardo J, Grapa J, Appanaitis I, Temengil E, Watson BM, Cash HL, The effects of chewing betel nut with tobacco and pre-pregnancy obesity on adverse birth outcomes among Palauan women, Matern. Child Health J 20 (8) (2016) 1696–1703.
    1. Novotny R, Fialkowski MK, Areta AA, Bersamin A, Braun K, DeBaryshe B, Deenik J, Dunn M, Hollyer J, Kim J, Leon Guerrero RT, Nigg CR, Takahashi R, Wilkens LR, University of Hawai‘i cancer center connection: the pacific way to child wellness: the children’s healthy living program for remote underserved minority populations of the pacific region (CHL), Hawaii J. Med. Public Health 72 (11) (2013) 406–408.
    1. Wilken LR, Novotny R, Fialkowski MK, Boushey CJ, Nigg C, Paulino Y, Leon Guerrero R, Bersamin A, Vargo D, Kim J, Deenik J, Children’s Healthy Living (CHL) Program for remote underserved minority populations in the Pacific region: rationale and design of a community randomized trial to prevent early childhood obesity, BMC Public Health 13 (2013) 944.
    1. Yamanaka A, Fialkowski MK, Wilkens L, Li F, Ettienne R, Fleming T, Power J, Deenik J, Coleman P, Leon Guerrero R, Novotny R, Quality assurance of data collection in the multi-site community randomized trial and prevalence survey of the children’s healthy living program, BMC Res. Notes 9 (1) (2016) 432.
    1. Li F, Wilkens LR, Novotny R, Fialkowski MK, Paulino YC, Nelson R, Bersamin A, Martin U, Deenik J, Boushey CJ, Anthropometric measurement standardization in the US-affiliated pacific: report from the children’s healthy living program, Am. J. Hum. Biol 28 (3) (2016) 364–371.
    1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention A SAS program forthe 2000 CDC growth charts (ages 0 to <20 years) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2014. . Accessed 1/19/2017.
    1. WHO, Federated States of Micronesia (Pohnpei) NCD Risk Factors STEPS Report, WHO Western Pacific Region, Suva, Fiji, 2008.
    1. Milgrom P, Tut OK, Gilmatam J, Gallen M, Chi DL, Areca use among adolescents in Yap and Pohnpei, the Federated States of Micronesia, Harm. Reduct. J 10 (2013) 26.
    1. Hancock WT, Durand AM, Yolwa A, Sagury J, Legthar C, Ratima M, Wachi K, Adhikary A, Yarawamai M, Yarawamai A, Maskarinec GG, Ulithi Atoll health assessment: a peek at the health of rural Micronesia, Pac. Health Dialog 14 (1) (2007) 156–164.
    1. Chiang C, Singeo ST Jr., Yatsuya H, Honjo K, Mita T, Ikerdeu E, Cui R, Li Y, Watson BM, Ngirmang G, Iso H, Aoyama A, Profile of non-communicable disease risk factors among young people in Palau, J. Epidemiol 25 (5) (2015) 392–397.
    1. Watson BM, Chiang C, Ikerdeu E, Yatsuya H, Honjo K, Mita T, Cui R, Madraisau S, Ngirmang G, Iso H, Aoyama A, Profile of non-communicable disease risk factors among adults in the Republic of Palau: findings of a national STEPS survey, Nagoya J. Med. Sci 77 (4) (2015) 609–619.
    1. 34th Constitutional Regular Session Betel Nut Prohibition (Amendment) Act. P.L. 2013–16., 2013. Nitijela of the Republic of the Marshall Islands.
    1. Sinha DN, Gupta PC, Tobacco and areca nut use in male medical students of Patna, Natl. Med. J. India 14 (3) (2001) 176–178.
    1. Wen CP, Tsai SP, Cheng TY, Chen CJ, Levy DT, Yang HJ, Eriksen MP, Uncovering the relation between betel quid chewing and cigarette smoking in Taiwan, Tob. Control 14 (Suppl. 1) (2005) i16–22.
    1. Lin CF, Wang JD, Chen PH, Chang SJ, Yang YH, Ko YC, Predictors of betel quid chewing behavior and cessation patterns in Taiwan aborigines, BMC Public Health 6 (2006) 271.
    1. Moss J, Kawamoto C, Pokhrel P, Paulino Y, Herzog T, Developing a betel quid cessation program on the island of Guam, Pac. Asia Inq 6 (1) (2015) 144–150.

Source: PubMed

3
구독하다