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Smoking down since California's tobacco control program
Source: (UCSD Press release) Friday, April 06, 2007
SAN DIEGO April 4, 2007 California's young adult smokers are quitting the habit in record numbers and older smokers are consuming far fewer cigarettes since the beginning of the California Tobacco Control Program, in 1989, a new study shows.
Led by Dr. Karen Messer, of Moores Cancer Center at University of California, San Diego (UCSD), researchers used national data from the U.S. Census Bureau to compare California smoking trends before and after the start of the campaign, and to compare the state's campaign-era trends with those of two comparison groups of states New York/New Jersey and the tobacco growing states (Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Georgia).
In a series of three reports published in the April 2007 issue of the bimonthly research journal Tobacco Control the researchers found that young Californians have increased their rate of quitting, compared to their counterparts in other states and to older Californians.
"We were surprised to find that, since the advent of the California campaign, young people have increased their rate of quitting by 50 percent, far more than their older counterparts," Messer said in a prepared statement. "It used to be that smokers over age 50 were the ones quitting because they understood the health consequences of smoking."
The three papers address the impact of the first 12 years of the California campaign on adult smokers, and focus on smoking cessation rates, daily cigarette consumption levels, and smoking trends among African Americans.
The first paper compares smoking cessation rates of young, middle-age and older smokers in the decade before the California campaign started (1980s), with rates during the first decade of the campaign (1990s). While all age groups studied, from age 20 to 66, showed increased rates of smoking cessation during the ‘90s, the youngest group, smokers age 20 to 34, stood out.
Messer cited the changes in social norms wrought by the California campaign such as restrictions on smoking in the workplace and in the home as the likely reason for the upward trajectory in quitting rates among younger smokers.
"These young adults have grown up in a tobacco-controlled climate, where smoking isn't the norm and isn't socially supported," she said. "We may be seeing the first generation who believe it's not cool to smoke, which could pay huge dividends in their future health," she said.
In analyzing the national data, comparing California to the two other groups of states, the researchers found that cessation rates were much higher among young adults in California than in the New York/New Jersey group, which is a similar population size and has high prices on tobacco, but no focus on de-normalizing smoking. Cessation rates among young adults in the tobacco growing states (TGS), which has low tobacco prices and no comprehensive tobacco control program, were significantly lower than either California or NY/NJ.
For older smokers, age 35 and older, cessation rates also went up during the ‘90s in California, but at about the same rate as in the New York/New Jersey group. This age group, the researchers say, may not be quitting at historic rates, but they are smoking fewer cigarettes, which is the focus of the second paper.
"We found that there is a national trend of declining cigarette consumption for all age groups, but the most significant by far was observed in California smokers over age 35," said the Dr. Wael K. Al-Delaimy, first author of the study of consumption. "The data suggest that compared with states with no tobacco control initiatives (TGS) or states with an increased cigarette price as the principal tobacco control measure (NY/NJ) California's comprehensive tobacco control program is more effective in decreasing cigarette consumption for those over age 35."
These two findings high rates of cessation and low rates of consumption spell good news in terms of Californians' health. The most important predictors of lung cancer and other smoking-related diseases are known to be the number of years people smoke and daily cigarette consumption.
The third paper in the series was designed to compare the effectiveness of California's comprehensive tobacco control program to price-centered programs (NY/NJ), with the tobacco growing states serving as a control group, in reducing adult African-American and white smoking prevalence rates over time.
The researchers found uniformly large annual rates of decline in African-American adult daily smoking across states during the ‘90s, regardless of the type of statewide tobacco control strategy.
"We found that, among whites, the smoking prevalence dropped dramatically in California, dropped modestly in the New York/New Jersey complex, and dropped very little in the tobacco growing states," said Dr. Dennis R. Trinidad, lead author of the third paper. "Among African-Americans, however, there were uniformly large declines across states, regardless of the type of tobacco control strategy."
Trinidad added that there have been strong anti-smoking norms in the African-American community starting in the ‘70s that have translated into lower rates of smoking initiation nationally, and it appears that this has persisted over time, above and beyond tobacco control practices the states implemented.
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