| Literature DB >> 22931428 |
David Levy1, Silvano Gallus, Kenneth Blackman, Giulia Carreras, Carlo La Vecchia, Giuseppe Gorini.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While Italy has implemented some tobacco control policies over the last few decades, which resulted in a decreased smoking prevalence, there is still considerable scope to strengthen tobacco control policies consistent with the World Health Organization (WHO) policy guidelines. The present study aims to evaluate the effect of past and project the effect of future tobacco control policies on smoking prevalence and associated premature mortality in Italy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22931428 PMCID: PMC3490827 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Data used in Italy
| Institute of Health Information and Statistics of Italy (ISTAT) | Breakdowns by age and gender groups | |
| ISTAT | Breakdowns by age and gender groups | |
| ISTAT | Breakdowns by age and gender groups | |
| Multipurpose Surveys “Aspects of daily living”, carried out from 1993 onwards by ISTAT | Breakdown of current, former and never smokers by age and gender groups. | |
| Change in smoking rates between contiguous age groups | Breakdowns by age and gender groups. | |
| Multipurpose Surveys “Aspects of daily living” | Breakdowns by age and gender groups. | |
| USDHHS (1989) and other studies | Breakdowns by age | |
| Cancer Prevention Study II (NCI 1997) | Breakdowns by age and gender. | |
| Eurostat, and MPOWER Reports (2008. 2010) | Prices and taxes | |
| Past studies, MPOWER Report (2008, 2010), and labor force participation rates | Types of laws (worksite, restaurant, and other places) and their stringency | |
| Tobacco control staff in Italy and MPOWER Reports (2008. 2010) | Classification based on expenditures per capita and audience | |
| Past studies, and MPOWER Reports (2008. 2010) | Extent of bans | |
| Past studies, and MPOWER Reports (2008. 2010) | Strictness of labels | |
| Past studies, and MPOWER Reports (2008. 2010) | Financial reimbursement, quitlines, and brief interventions | |
| Past studies, and MPOWER Reports (2008. 2010) | Enforcement checks, penalties, community campaigns, self-service and vending machine bans | |
Policies, description and effect sizes of the SimSmoke model
| | | Through price elasticity: |
| Cigarette price index | −0.3 ages 15–24 | |
| | | −0.2 ages 25–34 |
| | | −0.1 ages 35 and above |
| Ban in all areas | 6% with variations by age and gender | |
| Smoking restricted to ventilated areas in all indoor workplaces | 4% with variations by age and gender | |
| Smoking limited to non ventilated common area | 2% with variations by age and gender | |
| Ban in all indoor restaurants in all areas | 1% effect | |
| Restaurant ban except separate areas | Ban in all restaurants except in designated areas | 0.5% effect |
| Other places total ban | Ban in 3 of 4 (malls, retail stores, public transportation and elevators) | 1% effect |
| Government agency is designated to enforce and publicize the laws | Effects reduced by as much as 50% if 0 enforcement | |
| Campaign publicized heavily on TV (at least two months of the year) and at least some other media | 3.25% effect (doubled when accompanied by local programs) | |
| Campaign publicized sporadically on TV and in at least some other media, and a local program | 1.8% effect (doubled when accompanied by local programs) | |
| Campaign publicized only sporadically in newspaper, billboard or some other media. | 0.5% effect (doubled when accompanied by local programs) | |
| Ban is applied television, radio, print, billboard, in-store displays, sponsorships and free samples | 5% reduction in prevalence, | |
| | | 6% reduction in initiation, |
| | | 3% increase in cessation rates |
| Ban is applied all media television, radio, print, billboard | 3% reduction in prevalence, | |
| | | 4% reduction in initiation, |
| | | 2% increase in cessation rates |
| Ban is applied some of television, radio, print, billboard | 1% reduction in prevalence and initiation only | |
| Government agency is designated to enforce the laws | Effects reduced by as much as 50% if 0 enforcement | |
| Labels are large, bold and graphic | 2% reduction in prevalence | |
| | | 2% reduction in initiation |
| | | 4% increase in cessation rate |
| Laws cover less than 1/3 of package, not bold or graphic | 1% reduction in prevalence & initiation rates, 2% increase in cessation rates | |
| Health information is well publicized | 1% additional effect on prevalence and initiation rates | |
| Complete availability and reimbursement of pharmaco- and behavioral treatments, quitlines, and brief interventions | 4.75% reduction in prevalence, 39% increase in cessation rate | |
| Compliance checks are conducted regularly, penalties are heavy, and with publicity is strong, vending machine and self-service bans | 30% reduction for age < 16 in prevalence and initiation only, | |
| | | 20 % reduction for ages 16–17 in prevalence and initiation only |
| Compliance checks are conducted sporadically, penalties are potent, and little publicity | 15 % reduction for age < 16 in prevalence and initiation only, | |
| | | 10 % reduction for ages 16–17 in prevalence and initiation only |
| Compliance checks are not conducted, penalties are weak, and no publicity | 3 % reduction for age < 16 in prevalence and initiation only, | |
| 2 % reduction for ages 16–17 in prevalence and initiation only | ||
* Unless otherwise specified, the same percentage effect is applied as a percentage reduction in the prevalence and initiation rate and a percentage increase in the cessation rate, and is applied to all ages and both genders. The effect sizes are shown relative to the absence of any policy. They are based on literature reviews, advice of an expert panel and model validation.
SimSmoke Projections: Male smoking prevalence for ages 15 and above, Italy, 2010-2040
| 26.8% | 26.6% | 24.3% | 22.2% | 20.4% | |
| 26.8% | 25.8% | 22.0% | 19.6% | 17.6% | |
| 26.8% | 26.5% | 24.3% | 22.2% | 20.4% | |
| 26.8% | 26.4% | 24.1% | 22.0% | 20.2% | |
| 26.8% | 24.9% | 22.6% | 20.4% | 18.6% | |
| 26.8% | 26.5% | 24.2% | 22.0% | 20.2% | |
| 26.8% | 26.5% | 23.8% | 21.2% | 19.1% | |
| 26.8% | 26.1% | 23.2% | 20.9% | 19.1% | |
| 26.8% | 23.4% | 18.4% | 15.5% | 13.3% | |
| | −2.7% | −9.6% | −11.6% | −13.5% | |
| | −0.2% | −0.2% | −0.1% | −0.1% | |
| | −0.7% | −0.8% | −0.9% | −1.0% | |
| | −6.1% | −7.2% | −8.1% | −8.7% | |
| | −0.2% | −0.7% | −1.0% | −1.2% | |
| | −0.4% | −2.3% | −4.3% | −6.2% | |
| | −1.9% | −4.6% | −5.9% | −6.5% | |
| −12.0% | −24.5% | −30.3% | −34.6% | ||
* Measured relative to the status quo in the same year, i.e., (SRp,t-SRStatus quo,t)/ SRStatus quo,t, where SRp,t is the smoking rate in year t with policy p and SRStatus quo,t is the smoking rate in year t under the status quo.
** 25 % change 2010–2011, 20 % change 2011–2012, 15 % change 2012–2013, 10 % change 2013–2014, 5 % change 2014–2015. Prices kept at 2015 level throughout the remaining projection period.
SimSmoke Projections: Female smoking prevalence for ages 15 and above, Italy, 2010-2040
| 14.9% | 14.8% | 14.1% | 13.2% | 12.0% | |
| 14.9% | 14.4% | 12.8% | 11.7% | 10.5% | |
| 14.9% | 14.8% | 14.1% | 13.2% | 12.0% | |
| 14.9% | 14.7% | 14.0% | 13.1% | 11.9% | |
| 14.9% | 13.9% | 13.1% | 12.1% | 11.0% | |
| 14.9% | 14.8% | 14.0% | 13.1% | 11.9% | |
| 14.9% | 14.8% | 13.8% | 12.6% | 11.3% | |
| 14.9% | 14.5% | 13.5% | 12.4% | 11.3% | |
| 14.9% | 13.0% | 10.8% | 9.4% | 8.0% | |
| | −2.7% | −9.2% | −10.9% | −12.6% | |
| | −0.2% | −0.2% | −0.2% | −0.1% | |
| | −0.7% | −0.8% | −0.9% | −0.9% | |
| | −6.2% | −7.2% | −7.9% | −8.5% | |
| | −0.2% | −0.7% | −0.9% | −1.1% | |
| | −0.3% | −2.2% | −4.1% | −6.1% | |
| | −1.9% | −4.4% | −5.7% | −6.4% | |
| −12.0% | −23.5% | −28.9% | −33.2% | ||
* Measured relative to the status quo in the same year, i.e., (SRp,t-SRStatus quo,t)/ SRStatus quo,t, where SRp,t is the smoking rate in year t with policy p and SRStatus quo,t is the smoking rate in year t under the status quo.
** 25% change 2010–2011, 20% change 2011–2012, 15% change 2012–2013, 10 % change 2013–2014, 5% change 2014–2015. Prices kept at 2015 level throughout the remaining projection period.
Male smoking attributable deaths, SimSmoke Italy, 2010-2040
| 60,652 | 64,855 | 61,949 | 54,607 | ||
| 60,652 | 63,424 | 58,657 | 51,042 | ||
| 60,652 | 64,805 | 61,837 | 54,501 | ||
| 60,652 | 64,697 | 61,598 | 54,261 | ||
| 60,652 | 63,428 | 58,619 | 51,128 | ||
| 60,652 | 64,731 | 61,592 | 54,138 | ||
| 60,652 | 64,855 | 61,937 | 54,493 | ||
| 60,652 | 63,939 | 59,387 | 51,356 | ||
| | | | | | |
| 60,652 | 60,876 | 52,195 | 43,617 | ||
| | | | | ||
| | 1,431 | 3,292 | 3,565 | ||
| | 50 | 112 | 105 | ||
| | 158 | 351 | 345 | ||
| | 1,427 | 3,330 | 3,479 | ||
| | 124 | 357 | 469 | ||
| | 0 | 12 | 114 | ||
| | 916 | 2,562 | 3,250 | ||
| 3,979 | 9,754 | 10,990 | |||
** 25% change 2010–2011, 20% change 2011–2012, 15% change 2012–2013, 10 % change 2013–2014, 5% change 2014–2015. Prices kept at 2015 level throughout the remaining projection period.
Female smoking attributable deaths, SimSmoke Italy, 2010-2040
| 18,433 | 24,390 | 28,632 | 29,488 | ||
| 18,433 | 23,816 | 27,102 | 27,695 | ||
| 18,433 | 24,370 | 28,578 | 29,429 | ||
| 18,433 | 24,326 | 28,465 | 29,305 | ||
| 18,433 | 23,816 | 27,072 | 27,670 | ||
| 18,433 | 24,348 | 28,483 | 29,260 | ||
| 18,433 | 24,390 | 28,629 | 29,459 | ||
| 18,433 | 24,076 | 27,546 | 27,876 | ||
| 18,433 | 22,849 | 24,189 | 23,890 | ||
| | | | |||
| | 574 | 1,530 | 1,792 | ||
| | 21 | 54 | 59 | ||
| | 65 | 167 | 182 | ||
| | 575 | 1,560 | 1,818 | ||
| | 42 | 149 | 227 | ||
| | 0 | 3 | 29 | ||
| | 314 | 1,085 | 1,611 | ||
| 1,541 | 4,442 | 5,598 | |||
** 25% change 2010–2011, 20% change 2011–2012, 15% change 2012–2013, 10% change 2013–2014, 5% change 2014–2015. Prices kept at 2015 level throughout the remaining projection period.
Figure 1Contribution of each of the policies as a percent of the predicted 24.5% reduction in male smoking prevalence in 2020.