1,702 results on '"PREVENTION of tobacco use"'
Search Results
2. Impact of comprehensive smoke-free policy compliance on SHS exposure and health condition of the Georgian population.
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Bakhturidze, George, Peikrishvili, Nana, and Gvinianidze, Kakha
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TOBACCO use -- Law & legislation ,TOBACCO & health ,SMOKING cessation ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,SMOKING cessation products - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Georgia made steps forward in 2017 and adopted new amendments to its tobacco control legislation, which mostly correspond to the FCTC requirements. Among other changes in the regulations is a ban on smoking in public buildings and public transport, with a few exemptions (casinos, big slot clubs, performances in theatres, taxis). The regulation entered into force on 1 May 2018. METHODS The aim of the study is to assess the outcomes of the comprehensive smoke-free legislation in Georgia. We used a logical model for data collection and analysis. Our evaluation focuses on smoking prevalence related survey data, SHS exposure, monitoring results on compliance of new tobacco control regulations, Quitline data, and air quality measurement results. RESULTS The indoor air quality improved by 91% in the hospitality sector (from 1408 to 126 µg/m³ in 2018 and 117 µg/m³ in 2019), by 80% in public settings (from 531 to 112 µg/m³ in 2018 and 98 µg/m³ in 2019) and sufficiently in healthcare facilities (from 219 to 97-98 µg/m³ in 2018-2019). Demand for Quitline services increased by 30%. New cases of AMI declined by 32% during 2017-2019. CONCLUSIONS A comprehensive smoke-free policy with a high level of compliance (=95%) had a positive impact on the decline of SHS exposure and tremendous improvement of indoor air quality in public places and promotes a decrease in illnesses related to the cardiovascular system in Georgia. Also, demand increased for smoking-cessation services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. Youth susceptibility to tobacco use: is it general or specific?
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Cheng, Hui G., Lizhnyak, Pavel N., Knight, Natasha A., Vansickel, Andrea R., and Largo, Edward G.
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PREVENTION of tobacco use , *TOBACCO use among youth , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *ALCOHOL drinking , *RISK-taking behavior , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *TOBACCO products , *TOBACCO - Abstract
Background: Susceptibility to tobacco use predicts tobacco use onset among youth. The current study aimed to estimate the extent of overlap in susceptibilities across various tobacco products, investigate sociopsychological correlates with susceptibilities, and examine whether the relationship linking susceptibility with the onset of use is product-specific or is accounted for by a general susceptibility-onset relationship.Methods: The study population consisted of US youth 12-17 years old who had never used a tobacco product, sampled in the longitudinal Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health study wave 4 (Dec. 2016-Jan. 2018; n = 10,977). Tobacco product-specific susceptibility at wave 4 was assessed via questions about curiosity, likelihood to try, and likelihood of use if a best friend offered. The onset of use of various tobacco products was defined as first use occurring between the wave 4 and wave 4.5 (Dec. 2017-Dec. 2018) assessments (n = 8841). Generalized linear regression and structural equation models were used for data analysis.Results: There is a large degree of overlap in susceptibilities across tobacco products (65% of tobacco-susceptible youth were susceptible to more than one tobacco product). Tobacco-susceptible youths were more likely to have recently used cannabis, consumed alcohol, or to have been associated with tobacco-using peers. Structural equation models suggest that the susceptibility-onset relationship largely operates in a non-product-specific manner after accounting for the general susceptibility-to-tobacco-onset relationship.Conclusions: Youth susceptibility to tobacco use overlaps widely across different tobacco products and other risky behaviors. Findings from this study support a holistic approach towards the prevention of risk behaviors, supplemented by product-specific strategies when needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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4. European cancer mortality predictions for the year 2021 with focus on pancreatic and female lung cancer.
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Carioli, G., Malvezzi, M., Bertuccio, P., Boffetta, P., Levi, F., La Vecchia, C., and Negri, E.
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DEATH rate , *PANCREATIC cancer , *LUNG cancer , *CANCER in women , *CANCER prognosis , *BREAST cancer , *PREVENTION of tobacco use - Abstract
We predicted cancer mortality statistics for 2021 for the European Union (EU) and its five most populous countries plus the UK. We also focused on pancreatic cancer and female lung cancer. We obtained cancer death certifications and population data from the World Health Organization and Eurostat databases for 1970-2015. We predicted numbers of deaths and age-standardised (world population) rates for 2021 for total cancers and 10 major cancer sites, using a joinpoint regression model. We calculated the number of avoided deaths over the period 1989-2021. We predicted 1 267 000 cancer deaths for 2021 in the EU, corresponding to age-standardised rates of 130.4/100 000 men (−6.6% since 2015) and 81.0/100 000 for women (−4.5%). We estimated further falls in male lung cancer rates, but still trending upward in women by +6.5%, reaching 14.5/100 000 in 2021. The breast cancer predicted rate in the EU was 13.3/100 000 (−7.8%). The rates for stomach and leukaemias in both sexes and for bladder in males are predicted to fall by >10%; trends for other cancer sites were also favourable, except for the pancreas, which showed stable patterns in both sexes, with predicted rates of 8.1/100 000 in men and 5.6/100 000 in women. Rates for pancreatic cancer in EU men aged 25-49 and 50-64 years declined, respectively, by 10% and 1.8%, while for those aged 65+ years increased by 1.3%. Rates fell for young women only (−3.4%). Over 1989-2021, about 5 million cancer deaths were avoided in the EU27 compared with peak rates in 1988. Overall cancer mortality continues to fall in both sexes. However, specific focus is needed on pancreatic cancer, which shows a sizeable decline for young men only. Tobacco control remains a priority for the prevention of pancreatic and other tobacco-related cancers, which account for one-third of the total EU cancer deaths, especially in women, who showed less favourable trends. • We estimated 7% falls in men and 5% in women between 2015 and 2021 in EU total cancer mortality rates. • Almost 5 million avoided cancer deaths are predicted over 1989-2021 in the EU27. • Pancreatic cancer should be a major focus of public health efforts, since no major declines in rates were observed overall. • Lung cancer in women still shows unfavourable trends. • Tobacco control remains a priority for cancer control across Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. She Thanks You for Not Smoking.
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Wahba, Phil
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DRUGSTORES ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The article profiles Helena B. Foulkes, president at pharmacy chain operator CVS/Pharmacy Inc. in Wonnsocket, Rhode Island. It mentions her effort in making the company into a leader in health care by abandoning its tobacco sales. An overview of her conversation with executive Mike McEnany is also presented.
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- 2015
6. Initiating Pharmacologic Treatment of Tobacco Dependence: An Official ATS Clinical Practice Guideline (Running Title: ATS Tobacco Treatment Guideline).
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PREVENTION of tobacco use ,SMOKING cessation ,BUPROPION ,NICOTINE ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes - Abstract
The article presents a study related to initiating pharmacologic treatment of tobacco dependence. It mentions about treating tobacco abuse and promoting smoking cessation with bupropion, zyban, wellbutrin and buproban; and also mentions about an increase in use of tobacco, cigarette and 'nicotine. It also mentions about treating tobacco use disorder or preventing consumption of electronic cigarettes.
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- 2020
7. Coaliciones promotoras, perturbaciones externas y cambios en las políticas: Entender la intensidad de la política de control del tabaco en España, México y Uruguay.
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Guajardo Mendoza, Miguel Adolfo and Ramón Gil-García, José
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PREVENTION of tobacco use , *TOBACCO use -- Law & legislation , *HEALTH policy ,TOBACCO & health - Abstract
This article studies why some countries have more stringent policies for tobacco control than others. Three cases were studied that confirm two hypotheses of the advocacy coalition framework (acf). First, in all cases the policies intensified, to great extent, due to external perturbations of a normative type (epn). Second, only in Uruguay did the policies intensify due to external perturbations by changes in government (epcg). For the epn we find that the factors that enabled the change in policies were the durability and internal coordination within the minority coalition. And for the epcg were the position of the new ruling coalition and its ability to change the policy on its own. Also, the epn were more important for Spain while the epgc were more relevant for Mexico and Uruguay. This should be further investigated to determine if there is a relation between external perturbations and the context of each country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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8. Using Aggregate Temporal Variation in Ad Awareness to Assess the Effects of the truth® Campaign on Youth and Young Adult Smoking Behavior.
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Hair, Elizabeth C., Niederdeppe, Jeff, Rath, Jessica M., Bennett, Morgane, Romberg, Alexa, Pitzer, Lindsay, Xiao, Hijuan, and Vallone, Donna M.
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AWARENESS advertising , *INTERNET advertising , *TOBACCO use among youth , *ANTI-smoking campaigns , *MASS media , *PREVENTION of tobacco use - Abstract
Mass media campaigns are one of the most effective population-level interventions for the prevention of tobacco use. However, accurately evaluating the effectiveness of these campaigns presents several challenges, particularly as campaign delivery becomes increasingly fractured across media platforms. There are a number of weaknesses associated with traditional, individual-level measures of campaign exposure in an increasingly socially networked, digital media ecosystem. This study evaluated the national truth® campaign using a novel method to measure campaign exposure through an aggregate weekly exogenous measure of awareness. We generated this exogenous measure from a continuous, cross-sectional tracking survey to predict intentions to smoke and current tobacco use among youth in the United States. Results from multi-level models indicated that weeks with aggregate campaign awareness greater than 65% were associated with lower odds of current tobacco use. We conclude with a discussion of implications and practical considerations for using this method for media campaign evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Addressing Tobacco Control in Dental Practice: A Survey of Dentists' Knowledge, Attitudes and Behaviours in India.
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Chandrashekar, Janakiram, Manjunath, B. C., and Unnikrishnan, Madhu
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PRACTICE of dentistry ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,SURVEYS ,DENTISTS' attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGY of dentists ,THEORY of knowledge ,DATA analysis ,COUNSELING - Abstract
Purpose: Dental professionals are strategically placed to be the leaders in tobacco prevention and cessation as they provide preventive and therapeutic services to a basically healthy population on a regular basis. The objective of this study was to assess the tobacco cessation knowledge, attitudes and behaviours of dental practitioners in Kochi (Cochin), Kerala, India. Materials and Methods: A sampling frame of dentists enrolled in the Indian Dental Association (IDA), Kochi (Cochin) branch, practising in Ernakulam city, was obtained from the IDA. The letter describing the rationale for the study contained a 35-item pre-tested questionnaire and was personally delivered along with a stamped envelope. One hundred fourteen dentists returned a usable questionnaire. Data were entered and analysed using SPSS 12. Frequencies were calculated for all variables. Results: Based on the responding dentists' self-reports, 54.6% were not confident in tobacco cessation counselling, 10.6% never asked, 60.9% asked in 50% of their patients about tobacco use and 17.6% of the dentists surveyed were smokers themselves. Participating dentists perceived that they were interested in using tobacco cessation counselling, but were not sure of quitting rates in their patients. The average time spent counselling patients about tobacco cessation was less than 2 minutes. Conclusion: The dentists perceived that lack of formal training leads to less motivation about tobacco counselling and hence infrequently incorporated tobacco cessation into their dental practices. The cessation of tobacco habits among dentists is essential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
10. Dental Hygienists' Self-reported Performance of Tobacco Cessation Activities.
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Pau, Allan, Olley, Ryan C., Murray, Sarah, Chana, Baldeesh, and Gallagher, Jennifer
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SMOKING cessation ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,DENTAL hygienists ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,GUIDELINES ,HEALTH promotion ,PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: Tobacco use is a major risk factor in oral and systemic diseases. Current national guidelines outline activities that positively contribute towards tobacco cessation. Little is known about dental hygienists' role in tobacco cessation activities. This study investigates dental hygienists' performance of tobacco cessation activities in the dental surgery and explores factors associated with this performance. Materials and Methods: Dental hygienists in south-east England on the register of the British Society of Dental Hygiene and Therapy completed a postal questionnaire survey in 2008. Results: A total of 439 (61%) questionnaires were returned, representing both part-time (66.7%) and full-time (33.3%) hygienists working in the private (69.5%) and non-private sectors (30.5%). Most hygienists recorded positive attitudes towards tobacco cessation. Overall, 162 (41.9%) reported performing four or more tobacco cessation activities. The less-commonly performed activities indicated to patients the value of attending NHS Stop Smoking Services for specia- lised help, with hygienists referring patients to the NHS Stop Smoking Services and offering assistance to those who do not wish to attend NHS stop Smoking Services. Higher reported numbers of tobacco cessation activities performed were statistically significantly associated with a higher number of positive attitudes held (P = 0.004), while socio-demographic and professional attributes were not. Conclusion: Tobacco cessation activities, as recommended by national guidelines, are not always performed by dental hygienists. Efforts are needed to promote the dental hygienist's role in tobacco cessation, especially in relation to referring patients to NHS Stop Smoking services. These efforts should focus on changing the attitudes of dental hygienists, especially on their effectiveness in promoting tobacco cessation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
11. Effects of and challenges to bans on menthol and other flavors in tobacco products.
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Przewoźniak, Krzysztof, Kyriakos, Christina N., Hiscock, Rosemary, Radu-Loghin, Cornel, and Fong, Geoffrey T.
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MENTHOL ,ANALGESICS ,TOBACCO ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,TOBACCO & health - Published
- 2021
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12. SURVEY REGARDING SMOKING HABITS AND SMOKE-FREE ENVIRONMENT FOR CHILDREN, FROM CONSTANTA COUNTY, ROMANIA.
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Baciu, Alina, Lesan, Andrei, Gogonea, Ioana, Miu, Adelina, and Todea, Doina
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SMOKING , *NONSMOKING areas , *PEDIATRIC respiratory diseases , *SOCIAL context , *PREVENTION of tobacco use - Abstract
Introduction: Tobacco smoke and second-hand smoking exposure, at home or in school during childhood and adolescence, increases the risk of respiratory illness. Youth smoking is mostly associated with parents, and their smoking behavior. Also, there are other influences: social environment, targeted advertising, easy access to cigarette products, no control over age limit in purchasing cigarettes, lack of knowledge about the effects of smoking. Material and method: To evaluate the influence of the environment, social and personal beliefs, and educational influences on tobacco consumption in children, we developed a questionnaire that was applied to a group of middle school children from Constanta County, Romania. The purpose of this study was to gain the information required to create health programs, based on real-life smoking habits. The standard sample size was set for the minimum of 245 students. The resulting data was initially entered into an Excel spreadsheet and then imported into the SPSS software, version 19 (USA) of the statistical analysis program. Results: 254 students completed the questionnaire, based on the instructions given during their orientation. The gender distribution was very evenly split: 49.6% were male and 50.4% were female. Out of 254 students, 70 of them had tried smoking at least once by the time they were 15 years old. From the lifetime smokers, 2.86% tried their first cigarette by age of 7, but 12-13 year olds are most at risk to start smoking, when they are curious and open to experience new things. Also, 17% of current smokers smoked more than 10 days/month, and 11% of them have smoked more than 10 cigarettes/day. 14% of current smokers said that the first thing they do in the morning is smoke. Out of 254 subjects, 70.4% said that one or both of their parents are smokers, and 61% of them have at least one friend that smokes. In addition, 70.8% of subjects report that most of their classmates smoke. When purchasing cigarettes, either for personal or for someone else's use, 13 students were refused due to their young age, and 109 were allowed to make their purchase. 73 reported that they could purchase cigarettes within proximity of their school, and 92.5% of the subjects said that they are aware that smoking is harmful. 37.4% of subjects reported that they were taught at school about the effects of smoking within the last 12 months, and 72.44% discussed the detrimental effects of tobacco with their parents. Finally, 76.3% had heard anti-smoking advertising in the last 30 days. Conclusions: Comparing the above with data from international studies, in Constanta county, the age when the youth subjects started smoking is much lower than in other places. To address this issue, education towards awareness and more understanding of the harmful effects of smoking should begin in middle school. Education should not be limited only to students; parents, teachers and other adults involved in the education process should be trained to have an active role in creating a tobacco-free environment. Moreover, the smoke-free legislation should be enforced and respected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. An Efficient Message Evaluation Protocol: Two Empirical Analyses on Positional Effects and Optimal Sample Size.
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Kim, Minji and Cappella, Joseph N.
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MEDICAL communication , *MEDICAL personnel training , *MEDICAL protocols , *MESSAGE design logic theory , *PREVENTION of tobacco use - Abstract
Reliable and valid message evaluation has a central role in effective health communication and message effects research. The authors have employed a message testing protocol to efficiently acquire valid and reliable message evaluation results: (a) use multiple messages, (b) recruit evaluators from the target population, (c) use valid and reliable effectiveness measures, (d) expose an evaluator to multiple messages, and (e) ensure enough evaluations per message. Two secondary analyses of anti-tobacco message evaluation studies provide evidence for reliability and validity regarding points (d) and (e). Seven studies where adult smokers evaluated the effectiveness of various anti-smoking campaign messages were examined. The first analysis shows that the position in which a message appears has little or no impact on its evaluation, supporting the validity of multiple-exposure design. The second analysis suggests having 25 evaluations per message can achieve a fair balance between accuracy and efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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14. Up in smoke? Global tobacco control advocacy and local mobilization in Africa.
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Patterson, Amy S. and Gill, Elizabeth
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PREVENTION of tobacco use , *TREATIES , *TOBACCO use -- Law & legislation , *TOBACCO taxes ,TOBACCO & health ,AFRICAN politics & government - Abstract
Even though most African states have signed and ratified the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), a global treaty to limit tobacco use, African states have been slow to pass and implement tobacco control policies like regulations on sales, smoke-free environments and taxes. This article examines how the ineffectiveness of local tobacco-control advocacy contributes to this suboptimal outcome. It asserts that the disconnect between the global tobacco-control advocacy network and local advocates shapes this ineffectiveness. With funding and direction predominately from the Bloomberg Initiative, local advocates emulate the funders' goal of achieving quick, measurable policy results. Their reliance on the network drives African advocates to strive to pass legislation, even in difficult political climates, and to remake their agendas when funders change their priorities. They also emulate the network's focus on evidence-based arguments that stress epidemiological data and biomedical interventions, even when this issue frame does not resonate with policy-makers. Financial dependence can draw local advocates into expectations about patronage politics, undermine their ability to make principled arguments, and lead them to downplay the ways that their home country's socioeconomic and cultural contexts affect tobacco use and control. Based on key informant interviews with African advocates, media analysis and the case-studies of Ghana and Tanzania, the article broadens the study of philanthropy in global health, it adds an African perspective to the literature on global health advocacy, and it deepens knowledge on power dynamics between external funders and local actors in the realms of health and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. Increasing Price and Reducing Access to Tobacco in New York City.
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PREVENTION of tobacco use , *PRICE increases , *TOBACCO products , *CIGARETTE tax , *SMOKING prevention , *TOBACCO taxes , *TAXATION , *ACQUISITION of property , *DRUGSTORE laws , *MARKETING laws , *PACKAGING laws , *TAX laws , *PROFESSIONAL licenses , *LEGAL status of sales personnel , *PUBLIC health , *NICOTINE , *COST analysis , *GOVERNMENT policy , *ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *LAW , *TOBACCO laws ,TOBACCO & health ,NEW York (N.Y.) politics & government, 1951- - Abstract
This paper describes novel tobacco control laws passed in New York City in 2017. These laws are designed to improve the city's strategy of using price to decrease tobacco consumption, and over time, change the city's landscape by making tobacco less accessible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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16. Tobacco control policies and smoking among older adults: a longitudinal analysis of 10 European countries.
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Serrano‐Alarcón, Manuel, Kunst, Anton E., Bosdriesz, Jizzo R., and Perelman, Julian
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PREVENTION of tobacco use , *HEALTH of older people , *SMOKING policy , *LIFE expectancy , *SMOKING cessation , *TOBACCO taxes , *NONSMOKING areas , *EX-smokers , *HEALTH policy , *AGING , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PROBABILITY theory , *RETIREMENT , *SMOKING , *SURVEYS , *TAXATION , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Background and Aims: The impact of tobacco control on European older adults has not been studied, despite evidence that smoking cessation at old age can bring significant life expectancy gains. Our aim was to evaluate the impact of tobacco control policies on smoking among older adults in Europe from 2004 to 2013. Design We used longitudinal data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE, aged 50+ years) from four waves from 2004 to 2013. We used logistic regression models with clustered standard errors to determine whether the implementation of tobacco control policies was associated with changes in smoking status. Furthermore, we studied whether these associations varied by socio‐demographic characteristics. Regression coefficients were converted to changes the probability of smoking [marginal effects (ME)]. Measurements Smoking status was the dependent variable, and the Tobacco Control Scale (TCS) was the explanatory variable, overall and by its main policy components (pricing and smoke‐free policies). Covariates included age, sex, education and country and wave fixed‐effects. Findings A 10‐point increase in TCS was associated with a lower probability of smoking by 1.6 percentage points [95% confidence interval (CI) = −3.208, −0.056] for those aged 50–65, but not for older Europeans. Among those with primary school or no education, the associated drop was of 1.5 percentage points (95% CI = –2.751, −0.253). By contrast, no significant relation between TCS and smoking was observed among those with high education. Higher TCS scores for pricing (ME = –0.636, 95% CI = –0.998, −0.275) and smoke‐free policies (ME = –0.243, 95% CI = –0.445, −0.041) were associated with a significantly lower probability of smoking (P = 0.001 and P = 0.018, respectively). Conclusion: Increases in tobacco taxes and smoke‐free policies are significantly related with a reduction in smoking among European older adults, suggesting potential health gains for this rising share of the population. These policies may be more effective among the lowest educated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. Panel parametric, semiparametric, and nonparametric construction of counterfactuals.
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Hsiao, Cheng and Zhou, Qiankun
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COUNTERFACTUALS (Logic) ,AVERAGING method (Differential equations) ,VOTER turnout ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,CIGARETTES - Abstract
Summary: We consider panel parametric, semiparametric and nonparametric methods of constructing counterfactuals. We show through extensive simulations that no method is able to dominate other methods in all circumstances, since the true data‐generating process is typically unknown. We therefore also suggest a model‐averaging method as a robust method to generate counterfactuals. As an illustration of the sensitivity of counterfactual construction, we reexamine the impact of California's Tobacco Control Program on per capita cigarette consumption and election day registration (EDR) laws on voters' turnout by different methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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18. LGBT Identity and Its Influence on Perceived Effectiveness of Advertisements from a LGBT Tobacco Public Education Campaign.
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Navarro, Mario A., Hoffman, Leah, Crankshaw, Erik C., Guillory, Jamie, and Jacobs, Samantha
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LGBTQ+ identity , *ADVERTISING effectiveness , *ANTI-smoking campaigns , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *LGBTQ+ communities - Abstract
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) individuals are at increased risk for tobacco use compared to those who are not LGBT. The Food and Drug Administration's Center for Tobacco Products launched the first U.S. large-scale tobacco public education campaign for LGBT young adults aged 18-24, This Free Life. The current study, using data from the evaluation of the This Free Life campaign, investigated the role of LGBT Identity Affirmation (i.e., the development of positive feelings or attachment to being LGBT), LGBT Identity Centrality (i.e., the degree to which an aspect of a person's identity shapes their overall identity), and Identification with the LGBT Community (i.e., an individual's relationship with the LGBT community) on perceived effectiveness of four This Free Life advertisements. The current study sample included 2,788 LGBT young adults. For the "Our Story" and "Flawless" advertisements, all three identity constructs were statistically significant positive predictors of perceived advertisement effectiveness. For female-centric and male-centric "Tip the Scale" advertisements, LGBT Identity Centrality and Identification with the LGBT Community were significant positive predictors. An additional secondary analysis found differences in identity constructs between sexual and gender minority subgroups. These results support that identity constructs may be leveraged in health interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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19. The Human Rights of Children in Tobacco Control.
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Gispen, Marie Elske C. and Toebes, Brigit C.A.
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HUMAN rights , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *CHILDREN'S rights - Abstract
ABSTRACT Research demonstrates that tobacco morbidity and mortality disproportionately affects children, especially those living in low socioeconomic conditions. This article presents a systematic analysis of how international and regional human rights regimes may contribute to protecting and promoting specific aspects of child health and development in tobacco control enforcement. It reveals the blind spots and opportunities for a child-development specific rights-based approach to tobacco control. The article then demonstrates both the power and limitations of using international and regional human rights systems in countering the negative effects of tobacco. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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20. Smokeless Tobacco and the Rural Teen: How Culture and Masculinity Contribute to Adolescent Use.
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Helme, Donald W., Oser, Carrie, Knudsen, Hannah K., Morris, Edward, de la Serna, Ana, and Zelaya, Carina
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SMOKELESS tobacco , *RURAL teenagers , *MASCULINITY , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *HIGH school sophomores , *SOCIAL norms ,TOBACCO & health - Abstract
Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of disease, disability, and death in the United States. Smokeless tobacco (SLT) is primarily used by younger, rural males and often in the presence of other males. This formative study examined how hegemonic masculinity and male norms can lead to initiation and continued use of SLT by rural adolescent males and females. Survey data collected from high school sophomores in 4 rural high schools (n = 293) explores perceptions of masculinity and male norms' contribution to SLT uptake and use. About 22.5% of total sample reported lifetime use (34.4% male, 13.7% female), 10.9% reported past-month use (20.0% male, 4.2% female). Logistic regressions show a one-unit increase in adherence to traditional perceptions of masculinity more than doubled the odds of ever using SLT and significantly increased odds of 30-day use. Having male household family members who uses SLT significantly increased the odds of lifetime and 30-day SLT use for both genders, while having male family members who smoke cigarettes was not a significant correlate. Recognition of health warnings on SLT packaging was negatively associated with SLT use for both genders. Implications for inclusion of masculinity and male role models in SLT prevention intervention strategies are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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21. How liberals and conservatives respond to feasibility and desirability appeals in anti-tobacco campaigns.
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Lee, Younghwa, Yoon, Sukki, Chun, Seungwoo, Park, Chanmo, and Kim, Kacy
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PREVENTION of tobacco use ,ANTISMOKING movement ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,SOCIAL desirability ,SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
Using two experiments, this study aims to investigate how politically liberal or conservative message recipients respond to anti-tobacco appeals. The results show that in Study 1, respondents were exposed to a message about price policy. In Study 2, they were exposed to a message about a warning policy. In both studies, liberal participants more favorably evaluated anti-tobacco messages emphasizing feasibility rather than desirability, whereas conservative participants more positively evaluated messages emphasizing desirability rather than feasibility. Implications for policymakers and marketers are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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22. Household Implementation of Smoke-Free Rules in Homes and Cars: A Focus on Adolescent Smoking Behavior and Secondhand Smoke Exposure.
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Parks, Michael J., Kingsbury, John H., Boyle, Raymond G., and Evered, Sharrilyn
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NONSMOKING areas , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *PASSIVE smoking , *TEENAGERS , *TOBACCO use , *MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
Purpose: This study addresses the dearth of population-based research on how comprehensive household smoke-free rules (ie, in the home and car) relate to tobacco use and secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure among adolescents.Design: Analysis of 2014 Minnesota Youth Tobacco Survey.Setting: Representative sample of Minnesota youth.Participants: A total of 1287 youth who lived with a smoker.Measures: Measures included household smoke-free rules (no rules, partial rules-home or car, but not both-and comprehensive rules), lifetime and 30-day cigarette use, 30-day cigarette and other product use, and SHS exposure in past 7 days in home and car.Analysis: Weighted multivariate logistic, zero-inflated Poisson, and zero-inflated negative binomial regressions were used.Results: Compared to comprehensive rules, partial and no smoke-free rules were significantly and positively related to lifetime cigarette use (respectively, adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.80, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.24-2.61; AOR = 2.87, 95% CI = 1.93-4.25), and a similar significant pattern was found for 30-day cigarette use (respectively, AOR = 2.20, 95% CI = 1.21-4.02; AOR = 2.45, 95% CI = 1.34-4.50). No smoke-free rules significantly predicted using cigarettes and other tobacco products compared to comprehensive rules. In both descriptive and regression analyses, we found SHS exposure rates in both the home and car were significantly lower among youth whose household implemented comprehensive smoke-free rules.Conclusions: Comprehensive smoke-free rules protect youth from the harms of caregiver tobacco use. Relative to both partial and no smoke-free rules, comprehensive smoke-free rules have a marked impact on tobacco use and SHS exposure among youth who live with a smoker. Health promotion efforts should promote comprehensive smoke-free rules among all households and particularly households with children and adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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23. The Development of an Advertising Campaign to Discourage Smoking Initiation among Children and Youth.
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Peracchio, Laura A. and Luna, David
- Subjects
ADVERTISING campaigns ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,CHILDREN'S television programs ,ADVERTISING media planning ,PUBLIC service advertising ,SMOKING ,PUBLIC health ,ADVERTISING effectiveness ,SOCIAL marketing ,YOUTHS' attitudes ,SMOKING laws ,ADVERTISING - Abstract
The authors describe the development of an age-appropriate analogy-based advertising campaign to discourage tobacco use initiation among children and youth. The campaign was based on an assessment of young smokers' and nonsmokers' attitudes and beliefs about smoking and the development of young children's analogical reasoning ability. The ad campaign was tested to assess the age appropriateness of the ad analogies and then was implemented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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24. To Check the Level of Preparedness of Dental Professionals and Students to Prevent Tobacco Abuse.
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Manroy, Tanvi, Arora, Ishika, and Walia, Navdeep Kaur
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PREVENTION of tobacco use ,DENTAL personnel ,DENTAL students ,SMOKING ,DENTAL education ,SMOKING cessation - Published
- 2021
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25. The Impact of Tobacco-Free School Laws on Student and Staff Smoking Behavior.
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Bhatt, Rachana and Hinrichs, Peter
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TOBACCO products ,PASSIVE smoking ,SMOKING laws ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,SECONDARY school students - Abstract
A number of US states have enacted bans on tobacco use by students, staff, and visitors anywhere on the grounds of public elementary and secondary schools statewide. These laws are intended to reduce tobacco use, reduce exposure to secondhand smoke, reinforce anti-tobacco curricula taught in schools, and prevent children from viewing their teachers and fellow students using tobacco products. We examine the impact that the laws have on the smoking behavior of students, teachers, and other school staff by estimating difference-in-differences models that exploit the time variation in adoption of the laws across states. We generally find that these laws do not impact smoking behavior, although we do find some evidence suggesting a possible effect on nonteaching school staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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26. Information Dissemination and Audience Engagement with Tobacco Prevention Posts on Social Media.
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INFORMATION dissemination ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,CIGARETTE smokers ,HEALTH promotion ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
Understanding the appropriate medium to communicate health promotion messages is vital for improving personal and societal health. As increasingly more people utilize social media for health information, public health practitioners use these platforms to engage an existing audience in health promotion messages. In this study, the relational framing theory was used as a lens for studying how message framing may influence social media audience engagement. Specifically, we assessed how posts from Tobacco Free Florida's Facebook page were framed as either dominant-submissive or affiliate-disaffiliate to an implied audience of either smokers, non-smokers, active quitters, or a mixed audience, and the extent to which a direct call for engagement, in terms of a request to comment, like, or share the post, was used for audience engagement. A three-way interaction for the level of engagement through comments was significant, F(3,217) = 7.11, p < .001, η
p ² = .09, and showed that framing, a call for engagement, and varying implied audience choice played a role in audience engagement with smoking cessation posts on social media. Implied audiences of Tobacco Free Florida's posts included smokers, those who are trying to quit, and nonsmokers as health promotion can be targeted at the individual's health, social support infrastructure, or the well-being of the society, and implications for strategic message design and audience targeting are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
27. The palatability of sugar-sweetened beverage taxation: A content analysis of newspaper coverage of the UK sugar debate.
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Buckton, Christina H., Patterson, Chris, Hyseni, Lirije, Katikireddi, S. Vittal, Lloyd-Williams, Ffion, Elliott-Green, Alex, Capewell, Simon, and Hilton, Shona
- Subjects
- *
SOFT drinks , *BEVERAGE consumption , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *BEVERAGE industry , *HEALTH policy - Abstract
Background: Excess sugar consumption, including sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs), contributes to a variety of negative health outcomes, particularly for young people. The mass media play a powerful role in influencing public and policy-makers’ perceptions of public health issues and their solutions. We analysed how sugar and SSB policy debates were presented in UK newspapers at a time of heightened awareness and following the announcement of the UK Government’s soft drinks industry levy (SDIL), to inform future public health advocacy. Methods & findings: We carried out quantitative content analysis of articles discussing the issues of sugar and SSB consumption published in 11 national newspapers from April 2015 to November 2016. 684 newspaper articles were analysed using a structured coding frame. Coverage peaked in line with evidence publication, campaigner activities and policy events. Articles predominantly supportive of SSB taxation (23.5%) outnumbered those that were predominantly oppositional (14.2%). However, oppositional articles outnumbered supportive ones in the month of the announcement of the SDIL. Sugar and SSB consumption were presented as health risks, particularly affecting young people, with the actions of industry often identified as the cause of the public health problem. Responsibility for addressing sugar overconsumption was primarily assigned to government intervention. Conclusion: Our results suggest that the policy landscape favouring fiscal solutions to curb sugar and SSB consumption has benefited from media coverage characterising the issue as an industry-driven problem. Media coverage may drive greater public acceptance of the SDIL and any future taxation of products containing sugar. However, future advocacy efforts should note the surge in opposition coinciding with the announcement of the SDIL, which echoes similar patterns of opposition observed in tobacco control debates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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28. Differences in tobacco use prevalence, behaviors, and cessation services by race/ethnicity: A survey of persons in addiction treatment.
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Pagano, Anna, Gubner, Noah R., Le, Thao, Yip, Deborah, Williams, Denise, Delucchi, Kevin, and Guydish, Joseph
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- *
PREVENTION of tobacco use , *SMOKING cessation , *ETHNICITY , *HEALTH equity , *INTEREST (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: Disparities in tobacco use prevalence, behaviors, and services have been identified among people of different racial and ethnic groups in the United States general population. Persons in addiction treatment have among the highest smoking prevalence of any population. However, little is known about racial and ethnic disparities in tobacco use prevalence, behaviors, and services among persons in addiction treatment.Methods: Survey data were used from 1840 clients from 24 addiction treatment programs from the NIDA Clinical Trials Network. Multivariate regression analyses were conducted to assess associations between race/ethnicity (White, African American, Hispanic) and patterns of tobacco and other tobacco product use, as well as quitting behaviors and receipt of tobacco cessation services among current smokers (n = 1425) while in treatment.Results: There was no difference in cigarette smoking prevalence across racial/ethnic groups. In the multivariate models, Hispanics and African Americans, compared to Whites, were less likely to be daily smokers, use smokeless tobacco, or use e-cigarettes. African Americans and Hispanics reported more past-year quit attempts and higher use of menthol compared to Whites. Hispanics were more interested in quitting while in treatment than Whites. Contrary to expectations, African Americans reported receiving more tobacco cessation advice and services while in treatment than Whites.Conclusions: Some findings reflected broader population patterns (e.g., tobacco use behaviors, other tobacco product use), while others did not (e.g., no difference in tobacco use prevalence by race/ethnicity). The reasons for greater receipt of cessation services among African Americans are unclear. Findings indicate the need for continued engagement of African Americans and Hispanics in cessation services while in addiction treatment, and for addressing heavier tobacco use and lack of interest in cessation during treatment among White clients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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29. 'Teabacco': Smoking of nicotine-infused tea as an unintended consequence of prison smoking bans.
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Puljević, Cheneal, Coomber, Ross, Kinner, Stuart A., de Andrade, Dominique, Mitchell, Courtney, White, Alan, Cresswell, Sarah L., and Bowman, Jasper
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- *
PREVENTION of tobacco use , *TEA , *NICOTINE addiction , *PRISONERS -- Substance use - Abstract
Introduction and Aims: Following the introduction of smoke-free policies in prisons in several countries, there have been anecdotal reports of prisoners creating cigarettes by mixing nicotine patches or lozenges with tea leaves ('teabacco'). Among a sample of people recently released from smoke-free prisons in Queensland, Australia, the aims of this study were to explore the perceived popularity of teabacco use, motivations for its use and describe the process of creating teabacco to identify potential associated health risks.Design and Methods: This study used a mixed-methods design. Eighty-two people recently released from prison in Queensland, Australia completed surveys at parole offices measuring teabacco use while incarcerated. Twenty-one teabacco smokers took part in follow-up, qualitative interviews to explore survey responses in greater depth.Results: The majority of survey participants (57%) reported smoking teabacco while incarcerated, with 37% smoking teabacco frequently (> once per week). Teabacco use was primarily motivated by cigarette cravings. Participants described the perceived inevitability of prisoners finding substitutes for tobacco. Multivariate analyses found that self-rated poor physical health, having been incarcerated five or more times, experiencing cigarette cravings while incarcerated, and use of illicit drugs while incarcerated were positively associated with frequent teabacco use in prison.Discussion and Conclusions: Our findings suggest that teabacco use has become common practice in Queensland's smoke-free prisons. Correctional smoking bans are an important public health initiative but should be complemented with demand and harm reduction measures cognisant of the risk environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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30. Healthcare provider counseling to quit smoking and patient desire to quit: The role of negative smoking outcome expectancies.
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Tucker, Joan S., Stucky, Brian D., Edelen, Maria Orlando, Shadel, William G., and Klein, David J.
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- *
MEDICAL care , *HEALTH counseling , *SMOKING cessation , *PUBLIC health , *PREVENTION of tobacco use - Abstract
Aims: The U.S. Public Health Service Clinical Practice Guideline on treating tobacco use and dependence recommends providing advice to quit to every tobacco user seen in a healthcare setting. However, the mechanism through which counseling encourages patients to quit has not been adequately studied. This study tests whether the association between receiving healthcare provider counseling and desire to quit is accounted for by negative health and psychosocial outcome expectancies of smoking.Methods: Data were collected online from 721 adult smokers who had seen a healthcare provider in the past 12 months. Associations between counseling to quit, negative outcome expectancies of smoking, and desire to quit were tested, as well as whether outcome expectancies and desire to quit differed by type of counseling (counseling only vs. counseling plus assistance) and level of smoking.Results: Bivariate associations indicated a stronger desire to quit among patients receiving counseling, particularly when it included healthcare provider assistance to quit. SEM results indicated that the association between counseling and desire to quit was fully accounted for by patients' negative health and psychosocial outcome expectancies for smoking. These associations were found across levels of smoking in the case of health expectancies, but were limited to moderate and heavy smokers in the case of psychosocial expectancies.Conclusion: Results suggest that the time devoted to counseling patients about smoking should include providing some assistance to quit, such as recommending a product, prescription or program. Regardless of smoking level, this counseling should incorporate techniques to elicit patients' negative health and psychosocial expectancies of smoking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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31. DECREASING CAMPUS SMOKING WITH PUNISHMENTS AND SOCIAL PRESSURES.
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Clemons, Kaytlynn, Johnson, David B., Kiger, Amy, and Putnam, Janice
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SOCIAL pressure ,HEALTH of cigarette smokers ,SMOKING ,LUNG cancer ,PASSIVE smoking ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,COLLEGE campuses - Abstract
This paper reports the effectiveness of a Midwest state university's “100% tobacco‐free” policy. The policy used social pressures and punishments to incentivize tobacco users to no longer consume tobacco on campus. The policy had three distinct periods (Pre‐Promotion, Post‐Promotion, and Post‐Policy). Social pressures and punishments were introduced during the Post‐Promotion and Post‐Policy periods, respectively. Changes in cigarette consumption were inferred by counting the number of cigarette butts found at various locations on campus. A statistically significant decrease in the number of cigarette butts was observed during the Post‐Promotion period. After the initial drop, tobacco use remained constant for the remainder of the period. An additional decrease was observed once punishments were introduced in the third period. However, the number of cigarette butts observed on campus remained significantly above zero. Further research is needed to understand how smokers substitute across time, location, and tobacco products after the implementation of similar policies. (JEL I11, C99, I12) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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32. Differences in Subjective Experiences to First Use of Menthol and Nonmenthol Cigarettes in a National Sample of Young Adult Cigarette Smokers.
- Author
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D'Silva, Joanne, Cohn, Amy M, Johnson, Amanda L, and Villanti, Andrea C
- Subjects
- *
MENTHOL , *CIGARETTE smokers , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *BIVARIATE analysis , *HEALTH policy - Abstract
Purpose: Menthol has been hypothesized to ease the harshness of cigarette smoke. Thus, sensory experiences at first cigarette use may be one mechanism by which menthol facilitates progression to regular smoking. This study examined differences in subjective experiences to the first use of a menthol versus nonmenthol cigarette among new young adult smokers.Methods: Data were drawn from waves 5-8 of the Truth Initiative Young Adult Cohort Study, a national sample of 18-34 year olds assessed every 6 months. Analyses included a subset of young adult current smokers (n = 251) who initiated smoking in the past 6 months. Subjective responses to first cigarette use were assessed across menthol and nonmenthol initiators in bivariate analyses and adjusted models controlling for smoking correlates.Results: Fifty-two percent of new young adult smokers used a menthol cigarette at first use. First use of a menthol cigarette was higher in those aged 18-24 (vs. 25-34). Most black smokers (93.1%) were menthol initiators compared to 43.9% of white smokers. More than half of menthol and nonmenthol initiates felt relaxed or calm, dizzy, lightheaded, liking the taste and a rush or buzz at first use. Menthol initiators were less likely in bivariate and multivariable analyses to experience feeling nauseated at first use (adjusted odds ratio = 0.45; p = .020) compared to nonmenthol initiators.Conclusions: While few differences were found between menthol and nonmenthol initiators in their subjective experiences, fewer menthol initiates felt nauseated at first cigarette use. Future research needs to identify additional mechanisms linking menthol initiation to smoking progression.Implications: Menthol initiators were more likely to be younger (18-24 vs. 25-34), and black (vs. white) compared to nonmenthol initiators. Our finding that menthol initiators were less likely to feel nauseated at first cigarette use compared to nonmenthol initiators suggests that menthol may reduce aversion to early cigarette use among young smokers and thus has the potential to facilitate continued experimentation. Interventions and policy approaches to reduce tobacco use initiation and progression are urgently needed in young people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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33. Construct and Predictive Validity of Three Measures of Intention to Quit Smoking: Findings From the International Tobacco Control (ITC) Netherlands Survey.
- Author
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Hummel, Karin, Candel, Math J J M, Nagelhout, Gera E, Brown, Jamie, van den Putte, Bas, Kotz, Daniel, Willemsen, Marc C, Fong, Geoffrey T, West, Robert, Vries, Hein de, and de Vries, Hein
- Subjects
- *
SMOKING cessation , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *TEST validity - Abstract
Introduction: The aim of the study was to compare the construct validity and the predictive validity of three instruments to measure intention to quit smoking: a Stages of Change measure, the Motivation To Stop Scale (MTSS), and a Likert scale. We used the Theory of Planned Behavior as theoretical framework.Methods: We used data from the International Tobacco Control Netherlands Survey. We included smokers who participated in three consecutive survey waves (n = 980). We measured attitude, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control in 2012, intention to quit with three instruments in 2013, and having made a quit attempt in the last year in 2014. We conducted Structural Equation Modeling with three models for the instruments of intention separately and with one model that included the three instruments simultaneously.Results: All three instruments of intention were significantly and positively related to attitude and perceived behavioral control but none was related to subjective norm. All three instruments were significantly and positively related to making a quit attempt. The relation of the Likert scale with making a quit attempt (β = 0.38) was somewhat stronger than that of the Stages of Change measure (β = 0.35) and the MTSS (β = 0.22). When entering the three instruments together into one model, only the Likert scale was significantly related to making a quit attempt.Conclusions: All three instruments showed reasonable construct validity and comparable predictive validity. Under the studied conditions, the Likert scale performed slightly better than the Stages of Change measure and the MTSS.Implications: An assessment of the Stages of Change, the Motivation To Stop Scale, and a Likert scale showed comparable predictive and construct validity as measures for intention to quit smoking. All three instruments can be used in future research; however, under the studied theoretical framework, that is, the Theory of Planned Behavior, the Likert scale performed slightly better than the other two instruments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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34. Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Tobacco Product Use Among Middle and High School Students - United States, 2014-2017.
- Author
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Odani, Satomi, Armour, Brian S., and Agaku, Israel T.
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- *
TEENAGERS , *TOBACCO use , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *STUDENTS' conduct of life , *TOBACCO advertising ,TOBACCO & health - Abstract
During the past few decades, wide disparities in tobacco product use have been documented among the largest racial/ethnic groups in the United States (1,2); however, little is known about tobacco product use among youths from racial/ethnic groups other than whites, blacks, and Hispanics. Surveillance reports typically aggregate these racial/ethnic minorities into a single category because of small sample sizes (3). To assess tobacco product use among U.S. middle and high school students from seven racial/ethnic groups (non-Hispanic whites [whites], non-Hispanic blacks [blacks], Hispanics, non-Hispanic Asians [Asians], non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaska natives [AI/ANs], non-Hispanic Native Hawaiians/Other Pacific Islanders [NHOPIs], and non-Hispanic multiracial persons [multiracial]), CDC analyzed pooled data from the 2014-2017 National Youth Tobacco Surveys (NYTS). Prevalence of ever (≥1 time in lifetime) and current (≥1 time in past 30 days) use of seven tobacco products (cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, electronic cigarettes [e-cigarettes], hookahs, pipes, and bidis) was assessed; any tobacco product use was defined as use of one or more tobacco products, including hand-rolled cigarettes. During 2014-2017, ever-use of any tobacco product among U.S. middle and high school students was as follows: NHOPIs (45.1%), AI/ANs (43.8%), multiracial persons (38.2%), Hispanics (35.1%), blacks (32.3%), whites (32.0%), and Asians (16.3%). Current use of any tobacco product was as follows: NHOPIs (23.4%), AI/ANs (20.6%), multiracial persons (16.5%), whites (15.3%), Hispanics (14.6%), blacks (11.5%), and Asians (5.0%). Among black middle and high school students, cigars were the most common product currently used, whereas e-cigarettes were the most commonly used product for all other racial/ethnic groups. Comprehensive and sustained implementation of evidence-based, population-level tobacco control interventions could reduce prevalence and disparities in tobacco product use among U.S. youths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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35. Modeling the impact of changes in tobacco use on individual disease risks.
- Author
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Djurdjevic, S., Sponsiello-Wang, Z., Lee, P.N., Fry, J.S., Weitkunat, R., Lüdicke, F., and Baker, G.
- Subjects
- *
PREVENTION of tobacco use , *CIGARETTE smoke , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases , *HEALTH impact assessment , *COMPUTER simulation - Abstract
Abstract Reduced Risk Products (RRPs) do not burn tobacco and produce lower levels of toxicants than in cigarette smoke. The long-term effects of using RRPs on health are difficult to assess in a pre-market setting and a modeling approach is required to quantify harm reduction. The Population Health Impact Model (Weitkunat et al., 2015) follows a hypothetical population of individuals over time, creating their tobacco use histories and, based on these, estimating relative and absolute risks of lung cancer, ischemic heart disease, stroke and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Linking the tobacco use to the risk profile allow us to assess how the relative and absolute risks of these diseases vary between individuals aged 20, 30, 40 or 50 at baseline who have never smoked or who initiated smoking at 19 years old and either continued to smoke, quit smoking, or switched to RRPs with varying degrees of harm reduction. The simulations suggest that, for smokers in their 20s-30s quitting, or switching to RRP primarily prevents the accrual of risk, while in their 40s-50s it reduces risk. Though tobacco prevention has been the primary approach to limit smoking-related diseases, RRPs can also substantially reduce risks in individuals who do not quit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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36. Outcomes of a randomized trial evaluating two approaches for promoting pharmacy-based referrals to the tobacco quitline.
- Author
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Hudmon, Karen Suchanek, Corelli, Robin L., de Moor, Carl, Zillich, Alan J., Fenlon, Christine, Miles, Lyndsay, Prokhorov, Alexander V., and Zbikowski, Susan M.
- Subjects
DRUGSTORES ,HELPLINES ,SMOKING cessation ,PHARMACIST-patient relationships ,MEDICAL referrals ,PHARMACY technicians ,PREVENTION of tobacco use - Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the long-term impact of 2 promising intervention approaches to engage pharmacy personnel (pharmacists, technicians) in referring patients who want to quit smoking to the tobacco quitline.Design: Randomized trial.Setting: Community pharmacies in Connecticut (n = 32) and Washington (n = 32).Intervention: Two intervention approaches were evaluated: academic detailing (AD), which involved on-site training for pharmacy staff about the quitline, versus mailed quitline materials (MM).Main Outcome Measures: Changes in the overall percentage of quitline registrants who reported hearing about the quitline from any pharmacy during the 6-month baseline monitoring period versus the 12-month intervention period, and between-group comparisons of a) the number of quitline registrants who reported hearing about the quitline from one of the study pharmacies during the 12-month intervention period, and b) the number of quitline cards and brochures distributed to patients during the first 6 months of the intervention period.Results: The percentage of quitline callers who reported having heard about the quitline from a pharmacy increased significantly, from 2.2% during the baseline monitoring period to 3.8% during the 12-month intervention (P < 0.0001). In addition, comparisons controlled for seasonal effects also revealed significant increases in referrals. Across all 64 pharmacies, 10,013 quitline cards and 4755 brochures were distributed. The number of quitline cards distributed and the number registrants who reported hearing about the quitline from a pharmacy did not differ by intervention approach (AD vs. MM), although AD pharmacies distributed more quitline brochures (P = 0.022).Conclusion: Brief cessation interventions are feasible in community pharmacies, and the 2 approaches evaluated for engaging pharmacy personnel were similarly effective and collectively led to meaningful increases in the number and proportion of all patients who called the quitline. Involvement of community pharmacy personnel in tobacco cessation presents a significant opportunity to promote quitline services by connecting patients with an effective publicly available resource. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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37. EQUIPTMOD as a basis for rational investment decisions in tobacco control.
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Pokhrel, Subhash and West, Robert
- Subjects
- *
RATE of return -- Mathematical models , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *SMOKING cessation , *ECONOMICS , *COST effectiveness , *DECISION making - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the authors discuss various reports within the journal on topics including the use of the EQUIPTMOD economic modelling tool to assess the return on investment of various tobacco control practices, as well as the economic and health aspects of smoking cessation.
- Published
- 2018
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38. Estimates of costs for modelling return on investment from smoking cessation interventions.
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Trapero‐Bertran, Marta, Leidl, Reiner, Muñoz, Celia, Kulchaitanaroaj, Puttarin, Coyle, Kathryn, Präger, Maximilian, Józwiak‐Hagymásy, Judit, Cheung, Kei Long, Hiligsmann, Mickael, Pokhrel, Subhash, and on behalf of the EQUIPT Study Group
- Subjects
- *
RATE of return -- Mathematical models , *SMOKING cessation , *MEDICAL care costs , *LUNG cancer treatment , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *SMOKING , *CANCER treatment , *CORONARY heart disease treatment , *ECONOMICS , *COST analysis , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Abstract: Background and aims: Modelling return on investment (ROI) from smoking cessation interventions requires estimates of their costs and benefits. This paper describes a standardized method developed to source both economic costs of tobacco smoking and costs of implementing cessation interventions for a Europe‐wide ROI model [European study on Quantifying Utility of Investment in Protection from Tobacco model (EQUIPTMOD)]. Design: Focused search of administrative and published data. A standardized checklist was developed in order to ensure consistency in methods of data collection. Setting and participants: Adult population (15+ years) in Hungary, Netherlands, Germany, Spain and England. For passive smoking‐related costs, child population (0–15 years) was also included. Measurements: Costs of treating smoking‐attributable diseases; productivity losses due to smoking‐attributable absenteeism; and costs of implementing smoking cessation interventions. Findings: Annual costs (per case) of treating smoking attributable lung cancer were between €5074 (Hungary) and €52 106 (Germany); coronary heart disease between €1521 (Spain) and €3955 (Netherlands); chronic obstructive pulmonary disease between €1280 (England) and €4199 (Spain); stroke between €1829 (Hungary) and €14 880 (Netherlands). Costs (per recipient) of smoking cessation medications were estimated to be: for standard duration of varenicline between €225 (England) and €465 (Hungary); for bupropion between €25 (Hungary) and €220 (Germany). Costs (per recipient) of providing behavioural support were also wide‐ranging: one‐to‐one behavioural support between €34 (Hungary) and €474 (Netherlands); and group‐based behavioural support between €12 (Hungary) and €257 (Germany). The costs (per recipient) of delivering brief physician advice were: €24 (England); €9 (Germany); €4 (Hungary); €33 (Netherlands); and €27 (Spain). Conclusions: Costs of treating smoking‐attributable diseases as well as the costs of implementing smoking cessation interventions vary substantially across Hungary, Netherlands, Germany, Spain and England. Estimates for the costs of these diseases and interventions can contribute to return on investment estimates in support of national or regional policy decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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39. A utility of model input uncertainty analysis in transferring tobacco control‐related economic evidence to countries with scarce resources: results from the EQUIPT study.
- Author
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Németh, Bertalan, Kulchaitanaroaj, Puttarin, Lester‐George, Adam, Huic, Mirjana, Coyle, Kathryn, Coyle, Doug, Pokhrel, Subhash, and Kaló, Zoltán
- Subjects
- *
PREVENTION of tobacco use , *SMOKING cessation , *RATE of return , *SENSITIVITY analysis , *MARKOV processes , *ECONOMIC models , *SMOKING , *ECONOMICS , *ALGORITHMS , *RESEARCH funding , *SECONDARY analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MATHEMATICAL models of uncertainty - Abstract
Abstract: Aims: To inform the transferability of tobacco control‐related economic evidence to resource‐poor countries. Methods: We ran a univariate sensitivity analysis on a return on investment (ROI) model, the European study on Quantifying Utility of Investment in Protection from Tobacco model (EQUIPTMOD), to identify key input values to which the ROI estimates were sensitive. The EQUIPTMOD used a Markov‐based state transition model to estimate the ROI of several tobacco control interventions in five European countries (England, Germany, Spain, Hungary and the Netherlands). Base case ROI estimates were obtained through average values of model inputs (throughout the five countries), which were then replaced one at a time with country‐specific values. Tornado diagrams were used to evaluate the significance of sensitivity, defined as a ≥ 10% difference in ROI estimates from the base case estimates. Results: The ROI estimates were sensitive to 18 (of 46) input values. Examples of model inputs to which ROI estimates were sensitive included: smoking rate, costs of smoking‐related diseases (e.g. lung cancer) and general population attributes. Conclusion: Countries that have limited research time and other resources can adapt EQUIPTMOD to their own settings by choosing to collect data on a small number of model inputs. EQUIPTMOD can therefore facilitate transfer of tobacco control related economic evidence to new jurisdictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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40. Comparing the New York State Smokers' Quitline Reach, Services Offered, and Quit Outcomes to 44 Other State Quitlines, 2010 to 2015.
- Author
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Mann, Nathan, Nonnemaker, James, Chapman, LeTonya, Shaikh, Asma, Thompson, Jesse, and Juster, Harlan
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HELPLINES , *SMOKING cessation , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *CIGARETTE smokers , *HEALTH promotion , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Purpose: To summarize the reach, services offered, and cessation outcomes of the New York Quitline and compare with other state quitlines.Design: Descriptive study.Setting: Forty-five US states.Participants: State-sponsored tobacco cessation quitlines in 45 US states that provided complete data to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Quitline Data Warehouse (NQDW) for 24 quarters over 6 years (2010-Q1 through 2015-Q4).Intervention: Telephone quitlines that offer tobacco use cessation services, including counseling, self-help materials, and nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), to smokers at no cost to them.Measures: Percentage of adult tobacco users in the state who received counseling and/or free NRT from state quitlines (reach), services offered by state quitlines, and cessation outcomes among quitline clients 7 months after using quitline services.Analysis: Reach, services offered, and cessation outcomes for the New York Quitline were compared with similar measures for the other 44 state quitlines with complete NQDW data for all quarters from 2010 through 2015.Results: New York's average annual quitline reach from 2010 through 2015 was 3.0% per year compared to 1.1% per year for the other 44 states examined.Conclusion: Although the New York Quitline was open fewer hours per week and offered fewer counseling sessions and a smaller amount of free NRT than most of the other 44 state quitlines, the New York Quitline had similar quit rates to most of those state quitlines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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41. Characteristics of Hookah Tobacco Smoking Sessions and Correlates of Use Frequency Among US Adults: Findings From Wave 1 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study.
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Robinson, Joelle N., Baoguang Wang, Jackson, Kia J., Donaldson, Elisabeth A., Ryant, Chase A., and Wang, Baoguang
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HEALTH , *SMOKING , *HOOKAHS , *PIPE smokers , *PIPE smoking , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *SMOKING policy ,TOBACCO & health - Abstract
Introduction: Hookah tobacco smoking has increased in the United States. However, information on hookah use frequency and other characteristics of hookah use is limited.Methods: Investigators analyzed data from Wave 1 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, a nationally representative, longitudinal cohort study of US youth and adults. Our analysis draws on baseline data from adult (ages ≥18 years) ever (N = 10 624) and past year (n = 3947) hookah users. Bivariate and regression analyses were conducted to identify associations between demographics, use characteristics, and hookah use frequency.Results: Overall, 16.4% of adults reported ever smoking tobacco from a hookah. Of those, 31.9% reported smoking hookah within the past year. Among 3947 past-year hookah tobacco smokers, 10.7% were daily/weekly users, 13.7% were monthly users, 42.1% smoked every couple of months, and 33.5% smoked about once a year. Among daily/weekly hookah users, 66% were young adults (ages 18-24 years). When comparing daily/weekly hookah users to those who smoked every couple of months, more frequent hookah use was associated with younger age, male gender, a greater number of times the hookah is refilled during a session, fewer people sharing, and hookah ownership.Conclusion: Although there were few demographic differences between daily/weekly users and less frequent hookah tobacco smokers, some notable differences in use behaviors exist among use frequency groups. Unlike other tobacco products, hookah is often smoked communally, over an extended time period. A detailed understanding of hookah user characteristics and experiences could inform hookah-specific measures, messaging, and regulations.Implications: To our knowledge, this is one of the first studies to characterize hookah use frequency, session length, and other hookah use experiences using a nationally representative sample of US adult hookah smokers. Understanding characteristics of hookah tobacco smokers, their use experiences, and patterns of hookah use frequency would be useful in assessing risks for hookah tobacco dependence at the population level. Additionally, identifying variation in use behaviors of hookah tobacco smokers could be used to inform the development of strategies to reduce and prevent hookah tobacco use, such as tobacco regulations or public education efforts, particularly among young adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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42. Brazilian international cooperation in health in the era of SUS.
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Marchiori Buss, Paulo
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PREVENTION of tobacco use ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on public health ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL cooperation - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ciência & Saúde Coletiva is the property of Associacao Brasileira de Pos-Graduacao em Saude Coletiva and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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43. Reducing racial/ethnic tobacco cessation disparities via cognitive behavioral therapy: Design of a dualsite randomized controlled trial.
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Webb Hooper, Monica, Lee, David J., Asfar, Taghrid, Koru-Sengul, Tulay, Simmons, Vani N., Brandon, Karen O., Unrod, Marina, Correa, John B., Brandon, Thomas H., and Antoni, Michael H.
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PREVENTION of tobacco use , *TOBACCO use , *COGNITIVE therapy , *MANAGEMENT ,SOCIAL aspects ,TOBACCO & health - Abstract
Racial/ethnic disparities in tobacco cessation are such that U.S. minorities have greater difficulty quitting compared to White non-Hispanics. Group differences in distress (i.e., perceived stress and depressive symptoms) may contribute to cessation disparities. The allostasis model of health suggests that the toll of chronic stress experienced by racial/ethnic minorities may lead to dysregulation of the physiological stress system and drug use. Previous research suggests that group cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for tobacco cessation addresses distress as a modifiable mechanism and has the potential to reduce/eliminate disparities. The present study is a dualsite randomized controlled trial aimed at evaluating the efficacy of group CBT in eliminating racial/ethnic differences in smoking cessation and distress. The study utilizes a [2 (intervention: group CBT or group general health education [GHE]) × 3 (race/ethnicity: African American/Black, Hispanic, White)] factorial design by randomizing 225 adult smokers from the community. Both interventions provide eight counseling sessions and eight weeks of nicotine patch therapy. Assessments occur at the end-of-therapy, and at 3-, 6-, and 12-months. Generalized longitudinal mixed modeling will be used to test our primary abstinence outcome, biochemically-confirmed 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 12-months. We hypothesize that group CBT will reduce or eliminate racial/ethnic differences in perceived stress, depressive symptoms, and smoking cessation compared to group GHE. We also hypothesize that reductions in physiological distress, assessed by salivary cortisol, will mediate racial/ethnic group differences in smoking cessation, particularly among racial/ethnic minorities. This study has implications for eliminating disparities in psychosocial factors related to tobacco use and cessation. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02511236 . Registered on July 27, 2015. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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44. Preventive Interventions for the Second Half of Life: A Systematic Review.
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Hajat, Cother, Selwyn, Adriana, Harris, Mark, and Yach, Derek
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LIFE expectancy , *MENTAL health , *NON-communicable diseases , *MORTALITY , *PREVENTION of tobacco use - Abstract
Objective: Recent improvements in life expectancy globally require intensified focus on noncommunicable diseases and agerelated conditions. The purpose of this article is to inform the development of age-specific prevention guidelines for adults aged 50 and above, which are currently lacking. Data Source: PubMed, Cochrane database, and Google Scholar and explicit outreach to experts in the field. Study Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria: Meta-analyses, intervention-based, and prospective cohort studies that reported allcause mortality, disease-specific mortality, or morbidity in adults were included. Data Extraction: A systematic review was undertaken in 2015 using search terms of a combination of
and "intervention," "mortality," "reduction," "improvement," "death," and "morbidity." Data Synthesis: Interventions were categorized according to the Center for Evidence-Based Medicine Level of Evidence framework. Results: A summary table reports for each intervention the impact, strength of evidence, initiation, duration, and details of the intervention. Age-decade-specific preventive recommendations have been proposed relating to physical activity, diet, tobacco and alcohol use, medication adherence, screening and vaccination, and mental and cognitive health. Conclusion: Clear recommendations have been made according to the existing evidence base, but further research investment is needed to fill the many gaps. Further, personalized approaches to healthy aging complemented by population-wide approaches and broader cross-sector partnerships will help to ensure greater longevity is an opportunity, rather than a burden, for society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] - Published
- 2018
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45. "The Job Has Become Advocating for the Job": Threats to Funding Dramatically Influence Program Outcomes.
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McCullough, Anna, Ranney, Leah M., Simons, Daniel J., and Goldstein, Adam O.
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FINANCING of public health , *PUBLIC health , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *HEALTH promotion , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *PUBLIC health & economics , *PUBLIC health administration , *GOVERNMENT aid , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *JOB Descriptive Index , *IMPACT of Event Scale , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
As public health funding is increasingly threatened, a better understanding is needed about how periods of funding uncertainty impact program staff, activities, and outcomes. In North Carolina, 2 years of uncertainty and threats of funding cuts for a statewide youth tobacco prevention initiative contributed to reduced grantee morale and confidence about achieving program goals, displaced focus from core program activities, and caused premature loss of personnel, resulting in substantially reduced program activities and outcomes. The range of negative impacts of funding uncertainty and threats highlights the need for programs to create an infrastructure to support ongoing sustainability planning and activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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46. Tobacco-Related Education in Schools of Pharmacy in the Middle East: A Multinational Cross-Sectional Study.
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El Hajj, Maguy Saffouh, Awaisu, Ahmed, Saleh, Rana Ahmed, Al Hamad, Noora Mohammed, Kheir, Nadir, Zeenny, Rony M., and Fathelrahman, Ahmed Ibrahim
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PHARMACY education , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *PHARMACY colleges , *PHARMACISTS - Abstract
Background: Lack of adequate tobacco-related content in pharmacy curricula can interfere with pharmacist's ability to provide tobacco cessation interventions. This study aims to determine the extent of tobacco-related content in pharmacy schools' curricula across the Middle East region, instructional methods used, perceived adequacy and importance of tobacco education, and barriers for inclusion of tobacco-related content in pharmacy curricula.Methods: A web-based survey was sent to 120 schools of pharmacy in 13 Middle Eastern countries. Key faculty members were identified and sent an e-mail with an online link to the survey. Data were descriptively analyzed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 22.Results: Of the 120 pharmacy schools contacted, 59 schools completed the survey (49.2% response rate). Of this, 44 (74.6%) reported including tobacco-related content in their undergraduate curricula. Nicotine pharmacology and principles of addiction (64.4%), pharmacologic aids for tobacco cessation (61%), and health effects of tobacco (61%) were the most commonly reported topics. The topics that were least perceived to be adequately covered were monitoring outcomes of tobacco cessation interventions (5.9%) and epidemiology of tobacco use (15.4%). The top barriers to inclusion of tobacco-related topics in the curriculum were lack of time (75.9%), lack of experiential training sites focusing on tobacco cessation interventions (72.2%), lack of faculty expertize (66%), and perceived lack of priority of tobacco related content in pharmacy schools (66%).Conclusions: The current findings suggest that more efforts should be geared towards increasing content for tobacco education in schools of pharmacy across the Middle East and towards overcoming the identified barriers.Implications: This study is the first to assess the extent of tobacco-related content in pharmacy schools curricula across the Middle East countries. If pharmacy students are expected to deliver effective tobacco cessation services when they graduate as pharmacists, then schools of pharmacy in the Middle East should consider providing adequate tobacco-related content and training in undergraduate curricula. Pharmacy schools have to work on circumventing the identified barriers including lack of time, lack of experiential training sites offering tobacco cessation interventions, shortage of faculty with relevant expertize and placing low priority on tobacco education in pharmacy schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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47. Bidirectional associations of e-cigarette, conventional cigarette and waterpipe experimentation among adolescents: A cross-lagged model.
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Pénzes, Melinda, Foley, Kristie L., Nădășan, Valentin, Paulik, Edit, Ábrám, Zoltán, and Urbán, Róbert
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ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *TOBACCO use , *TEENAGERS , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *NICOTINE addiction treatment , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Purpose: With an increasingly diverse tobacco product market, it is imperative to understand the trajectories of product experimentation in order to design effective prevention programs. This study aims to explore the bidirectional associations of conventional cigarette, e-cigarette and waterpipe experimentation in a large adolescent sample.Methods: Longitudinal assessment of conventional cigarette, e-cigarette and waterpipe use initiation was conducted in a school-based cohort of 1369 9th graders (mean age=14.88 SD=0.48 at baseline) during fall 2014 and reassessed 6-months later using online self-reported questionnaires. Autoregressive cross-lagged analysis within structural equation modeling framework was performed to simultaneously estimate the initiation of these products over a six-month period, controlling for age, gender, and participation in an intervention program to reduce conventional cigarette initiation.Results: Tobacco product lifetime use was prevalent at baseline in the sample: conventional cigarettes (48.4%), e-cigarettes (35.8%), and waterpipe (20.8%). At six-month follow-up, trying conventional cigarettes predicted trying e-cigarette (adjusted odds ratio (AOR)=3.78, CI95%: 2.66-5.37) and trying waterpipe (AOR=2.82, CI95%: 2.00-3.97). Trying e-cigarette predicted trying conventional cigarette (AOR=3.57, CI95%: 1.96-6.49) and trying waterpipe (AOR=1.51, CI95%: 1.07-2.14). Although trying waterpipe predicted trying e-cigarette at follow-up (AOR=2.10, CI95%: 1.30-3.40), its use did not predict trying conventional cigarette (AOR=0.55, CI95%: 0.24-1.30).Conclusions: The high rates of poly-tobacco use and the bidirectionality of tobacco product experimentation demands comprehensive tobacco control and prevention programs that address the increasingly diverse tobacco product market targeting adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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48. Tobacco Intervention - Role of Dental Professionals: The dental clinic provides an ideal environment for providing tobacco intervention services as countless adult smokers and adolescent tobacco users invariably see a dentist once a year.
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PREVENTION of tobacco use ,DENTISTS ,TOBACCO use -- Risk factors - Published
- 2018
49. State tobacco control expenditures and tax paid cigarette sales.
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Tauras, John A., Xu, Xin, Huang, Jidong, King, Brian, Lavinghouze, S. Rene, Sneegas, Karla S., and Chaloupka, Frank J.
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PREVENTION of tobacco use , *CIGARETTE tax , *CIGARETTE sales & prices , *MEDICAL communication , *HEALTH programs - Abstract
This research is the first nationally representative study to examine the relationship between actual state-level tobacco control spending in each of the 5 CDC’s Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Program categories and cigarette sales. We employed several alternative two-way fixed-effects regression techniques to estimate the determinants of cigarette sales in the United States for the years 2008–2012. State spending on tobacco control was found to have a negative and significant impact on cigarette sales in all models that were estimated. Spending in the areas of cessation interventions, health communication interventions, and state and community interventions were found to have a negative impact on cigarette sales in all models that were estimated, whereas spending in the areas of surveillance and evaluation, and administration and management were found to have negative effects on cigarette sales in only some models. Our models predict that states that spend up to seven times their current levels could still see significant reductions in cigarette sales. The findings from this research could help inform further investments in state tobacco control programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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50. Harm Minimization and Tobacco Control: Reframing Societal Views of Nicotine Use to Rapidly Save Lives.
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Abrams, David B., Glasser, Allison M., Pearson, Jennifer L., Villanti, Andrea C., Collins, Lauren K., and Niaura, Raymond S.
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HARM reduction , *PREVENTION of tobacco use , *ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of nicotine , *SMOKING , *NICOTINE , *PUBLIC health , *TOBACCO , *TOBACCO products - Abstract
Inhalation of the toxic smoke produced by combusting tobacco products, primarily cigarettes, is the overwhelming cause of tobacco-related disease and death in the United States and globally. A diverse class of alternative nicotine delivery systems (ANDS) has recently been developed that do not combust tobacco and are substantially less harmful than cigarettes. ANDS have the potential to disrupt the 120-year dominance of the cigarette and challenge the field on how the tobacco pandemic could be reversed if nicotine is decoupled from lethal inhaled smoke. ANDS may provide a means to compete with, and even replace, combusted cigarette use, saving more lives more rapidly than previously possible. On the basis of the scientific evidence on ANDS, we explore benefits and harms to public health to guide practice, policy, and regulation. A reframing of societal nicotine use through the lens of harm minimization is an extraordinary opportunity to enhance the impact of tobacco control efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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