Literature DB >> 25025523

Nicotine reduction as an increase in the unit price of cigarettes: a behavioral economics approach.

Tracy T Smith1, Alan F Sved2, Dorothy K Hatsukami3, Eric C Donny4.   

Abstract

Urgent action is needed to reduce the harm caused by smoking. Product standards that reduce the addictiveness of cigarettes are now possible both in the U.S. and in countries party to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Specifically, standards that required substantially reduced nicotine content in cigarettes could enable cessation in smokers and prevent future smoking among current non-smokers. Behavioral economics uses principles from the field of microeconomics to characterize how consumption of a reinforcer changes as a function of the unit price of that reinforcer (unit price=cost/reinforcer magnitude). A nicotine reduction policy might be considered an increase in the unit price of nicotine because smokers are paying more per unit of nicotine. This perspective allows principles from behavioral economics to be applied to nicotine reduction research questions, including how nicotine consumption, smoking behavior, use of other tobacco products, and use of other drugs of abuse are likely to be affected. This paper reviews the utility of this approach and evaluates the notion that a reduction in nicotine content is equivalent to a reduction in the reinforcement value of smoking-an assumption made by the unit price approach.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Behavioral economics; Nicotine; Policy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25025523      PMCID: PMC4446706          DOI: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2014.07.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prev Med        ISSN: 0091-7435            Impact factor:   4.018


  51 in total

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8.  Nornicotine is self-administered intravenously by rats.

Authors:  M T Bardo; T A Green; P A Crooks; L P Dwoskin
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9.  A comparison of measures of relative reinforcing efficacy and behavioral economics: cigarettes and money in smokers.

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3.  Examining effects of unit price on preference for reduced nicotine content cigarettes and smoking rate.

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4.  Shifting Frontiers in Basic Research on Nicotine and Tobacco Products.

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6.  Behavior change, health, and health disparities: an introduction.

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7.  Behavioral Economic Laboratory Research in Tobacco Regulatory Science.

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8.  Characterizing the relationship between increases in the cost of nicotine and decreases in nicotine content in adult male rats: implications for tobacco regulation.

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9.  Effects of MAO inhibition and a combination of minor alkaloids, β-carbolines, and acetaldehyde on nicotine self-administration in adult male rats.

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10.  Use of High-Nicotine/Tar-Yield (Full-Flavor) Cigarettes and Risk for Nicotine Dependence in Nationally Representative Samples of US Smokers.

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