Smoking prevalence, males (% of adults) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Prevalence of smoking, male is the percentage of men ages 15 and over who currently smoke any tobacco product on a daily or non-daily basis. It excludes smokeless tobacco use. The rates are age-standardized.

Source: World Health Organization, Global Health Observatory Data Repository (http://apps.who.int/ghodata/).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Egypt 48.10 2020
2 Tunisia 47.20 2020
3 Lesotho 43.10 2020
4 Madagascar 42.70 2020
5 Algeria 41.30 2020
6 Mauritius 37.30 2020
7 Seychelles 34.00 2020
7 South Africa 34.00 2020
9 Botswana 30.40 2020
10 Comoros 29.50 2020
11 Morocco 28.20 2020
12 Congo 26.80 2020
13 Zambia 25.10 2020
14 Namibia 24.20 2020
15 Mozambique 23.00 2020
16 Dem. Rep. Congo 22.70 2020
17 Burkina Faso 22.10 2020
18 Zimbabwe 21.80 2020
19 The Gambia 21.40 2020
20 Sierra Leone 20.50 2020
21 Rwanda 20.10 2020
22 Kenya 19.50 2020
23 Mauritania 19.30 2020
24 Côte d'Ivoire 17.90 2020
25 Malawi 17.50 2020
26 Burundi 17.40 2020
27 Cabo Verde 17.30 2020
28 Guinea-Bissau 17.00 2020
29 Eswatini 16.50 2020
30 Mali 15.60 2020
31 Eritrea 14.70 2020
32 Liberia 14.30 2020
33 Tanzania 14.00 2020
34 Chad 13.80 2020
35 Niger 13.70 2020
36 Cameroon 13.20 2020
37 Senegal 13.10 2020
38 Uganda 13.00 2020
39 Togo 12.30 2020
40 Benin 11.80 2020
41 São Tomé and Principe 10.10 2020
42 Ethiopia 8.80 2020
43 Nigeria 6.90 2020
44 Ghana 6.60 2020

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Statistical Concept and Methodology: The limited availability of data on health status is a major constraint in assessing the health situation in developing countries. Surveillance data are lacking for many major public health concerns. Estimates of prevalence and incidence are available for some diseases but are often unreliable and incomplete. National health authorities differ widely in capacity and willingness to collect or report information. To compensate for this and improve reliability and international comparability, the World Health Organization (WHO) prepares estimates in accordance with epidemiological models and statistical standards. Smoking is the most common form of tobacco use and the prevalence of smoking is therefore a good measure of the tobacco epidemic. (Corrao MA, Guindon GE, Sharma N, Shokoohi DF (eds). Tobacco Control Country Profiles, 2000, American Cancer Society, Atlanta.) Tobacco use causes heart and other vascular diseases and cancers of the lung and other organs. Given the long delay between starting to smoke and the onset of disease, the health impact of smoking will increase rapidly only in the next few decades. The data presented are age-standardized rates for adults ages 15 and older from the WHO.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual