| Literature DB >> 20382648 |
Mary V Modayil1, David W Cowling, Hao Tang, April Roeseler.
Abstract
AIM: We conducted this study to determine key community-level factors associated with higher tobacco control programme performance.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20382648 PMCID: PMC2976494 DOI: 10.1136/tc.2009.031252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Control ISSN: 0964-4563 Impact factor: 7.552
Figure 1Logic model framework for California tobacco control policy outcomes.
Mean changes in cumulative percentage of population covered by TRL and SHS policies from 2001 to 2007
| Policy | ‘Strong counties’ | ‘Remaining counties’ | ||||
| n | % | 95% CI | n | % | 95% CI | |
| TRL—strong policies | ||||||
| 2001–2004 | 7 | 19.5 | (13.2, 25.8) | 51 | 2.1 | (1.1, 3.0) |
| 2004–2007 | 14 | 33.2 | (30.6, 35.8) | 44 | 6.3 | (4.6, 8.1) |
| SHS—outdoor public places policies | ||||||
| 2001–2004 | 6 | 14.3 | (11.7, 16.9) | 52 | 4.8 | (3.6, 6.0) |
| 2004–2007 | 11 | 25.5 | (23.1, 27.9) | 47 | 6.8 | (5.0, 8.5) |
Defined by strength of tobacco control measure which is a combination of quality of work plan implementation and the per cent budgeted deliverable effort to each objective. SHS, secondhand smoke; TRL, tobacco retail licensing.
Mean changes in pro-tobacco industry efforts from 2001 to 2007
| Characteristic | 2001–2004 | 2004–2007 | Change in mean (2001–2007) | |||
| Mean | 95% CI | Mean | 95% CI | Mean | 95% CI | |
| Average proportion of bills voted in favour of tobacco control (mean of assembly and senate) | 0.54 | (0.32, 0.88) | 0.69 | (0.39, 1.00) | 0.15 | (0.10, 0.20) |
| Dollars to legislators (per 1000 population) | 40.91 | (37.37, 44.44) | 30.27 | (27.13, 33.40) | −10.64 | (−13.42, −7.86) |
| Number of tobacco industry events | 3.2 | (2.4, 4.0) | 1.9 | (1.5, 2.3) | −1.3 | (−1.8, −0.8) |
Impact of county-level efforts on increasing tobacco retail licensing (TRL) policies
| Model | Predictor† | Change in the percent of population covered by strong TRL | 95% CI | p Value |
| Basic | Deliverable-implementation quality | |||
| No implementation, no deliverable | Reference | |||
| High implementation, no deliverable | 8.7% | (−2.1, 19.6) | ||
| No implementation, high deliverable | −3.1% | (−7.5, 1.2) | ||
| High implementation, high deliverable | 13.7% | (2.0, 25.4) | 0.03 | |
| Fitted with covariates | Deliverable-implementation quality | |||
| No implementation, no deliverable | Reference | |||
| High implementation, no deliverable | 2.6% | (−2.9, 8.2) | ||
| No implementation, high deliverable | −1.4% | (−4.9, 2.0) | ||
| High implementation, high deliverable | 8.0% | (5.0, −1.9) | 0.1 | |
| Voted for tobacco control bills (vs. vetoed) | 3.2% | (−2.5, 8.9) | 0.3 | |
| Tobacco-industry sponsored events (vs. none) | 6.8% | (0.2, 13.3) | 0.05 | |
| Monies to legislators | ||||
| No monies (referent) | Reference | |||
| <$50K | 10.6% | (−0.2, 21.4) | ||
| ≥$50K | 0.1% | (−5.1, 5.4) | 0.19 | |
| Best fit | Deliverable-implementation quality | |||
| Other levels of implementation and deliverable | ||||
| High implementation, high deliverable | 7.2% | (−1.7, 16.1) | 0.1 | |
| Voted for tobacco control bills (vs. vetoed) | 9.6% | (1.2, 18.0) | 0.02 | |
p-Value from type 3 score statistics.
†Refer to text for predictor definitions.
Impact of county-level efforts on increasing outdoor public secondhand smoke (SHS) policies
| Model | Predictor | Change in the percent of population covered by strong SHS ordinances | 95% CI | p Value |
| Basic | Deliverable-implementation quality | |||
| No implementation, no deliverable | Reference | |||
| High implementation, no deliverable | 5.7% | (−2.3, 13.6) | ||
| No implementation, high deliverable | −0.6% | (−8.5, 7.3) | ||
| High implementation, high deliverable | 10.6% | (−3.7, 24.9) | 0.2 | |
| Fitted with covariates | Deliverable-implementation quality (4-level) | |||
| No implementation, no deliverable | Reference | |||
| High implementation, no deliverable | 4.0% | (−3.4, 11.3) | ||
| No implementation, high deliverable | −0.9% | (−7.7, 5.9) | ||
| High implementation, high deliverable | 6.2% | (−6.2, 18.5) | 0.3 | |
| Voted for tobacco control bills (vs. vetoed) | 7.6% | (−5.1, 20.3) | 0.3 | |
| Monies to legislators | ||||
| No monies (referent) | Reference | |||
| <$50K | 15.5% | (−2.3, 33.3) | ||
| ≥$50K | 12.6% | (2.3, 22.9) | 0.4 | |
| Best fit | Deliverable-implementation quality (2-level) | |||
| Other levels of implementation and deliverable | Reference | |||
| High implementation, high deliverable | 9.2% | (−3.5, 21.9) | 0.2 | |
Using type 3 score statistics no predictors were significantly associated with successful increases in SHS policies.
Refer to text for predictor definitions.