| Literature DB >> 28163669 |
Brooke L Bennett1, Melodi Deiner1, Pallav Pokhrel1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Currently, most college campuses across the U.S. in some way address on-campus cigarette smoking, mainly through policies that restrict smoking on campus premises. However, it is not well understood whether college-level anti-smoking policies help reduce cigarette smoking among students. In addition, little is known about policies that may have an impact on student smoking behavior. This study attempted to address these issues through a literature review.Entities:
Keywords: Cigarette smoking; College; Policies; Young adults
Year: 2017 PMID: 28163669 PMCID: PMC5286782 DOI: 10.1186/s12971-017-0117-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Induc Dis ISSN: 1617-9625 Impact factor: 2.600
Fig. 1Chart depicting selection of the final set of articles reviewed
Study characteristics and main study findings
| Study | Purpose | Study Design | Methods | Policy type | Subjects | College type | Region | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Borders et al. [ | To determine the association between university tobacco control policies and students’ | Cross-sectional | Self-report | Prohibit on - campus sales and distribution of tobacco products |
| 4 year | South | Having preventive education program on campus was |
| Braverman et al. [ | To determine the extent of outdoor tobacco smoke exposure and identify correlates of policy support a year after smoke-free policy was enactment | Cross-sectional | Self-report | Smoke-free campus |
| 4 year | Northwest | Enactment of policy led to smoking activity shifting to the campus periphery. |
| Butler et al. [ | To determine the associations between community and campus smoke-free policies and attitudes and behaviors of undergraduate alcohol drinkers, including motivation to quit smoking | Cross-sectional | Self-report | Smoke-free campus and smoke-free bars close to campus |
| 4 year | South | 26% of the sample were current smokers |
| Fallin et al. [ | To validate the Tobacco-Free Compliance Assessment Tool designed to assess compliance with tobacco-free campus policy | Cross-sectional | Cigarette butts and smokers were counted in hot spots | Tobacco-free campus | NA | 4 year | Southeast | More cigarette butts were counted in areas not covered by the tobacco-free policy in the health care campus |
| Fallin et al. [ | To assess the association between tobacco-free college policies and students’ tobacco smoking behavior and attitudes | Cross-sectional | Self-report | Smoke-free indoors only (campus) |
| 4 year | West | Recent smoking was highest among students on campuses with designated outdoor smoking, compared to campuses with other policies (e.g., tobacco free, smoke-free) |
| Hahn et al. [ | To assess the outcomes and costs associated with implementing a tobacco-free policy using 3 T approach (Tell, Treat, and Train) | Cross-sectional | Counting smokers using cessation services | Tobacco-free campus with smoking cessation service | Demographics for treatment seeking individuals NP | 4 year | Southeast | 335 smokers received treatment after policy took effect over 2-year period compared with 33 smokers in the year preceding policy enactment |
| Harris et al. [ | To test the effects of a tobacco-free campus policy enforcement package | Longitudinal | Observers recorded smokers’ compliance before and after intervention | Restrict smoking to 25 ft from building entrances |
| 4 year | Northwest | The intervention had a significant effect on compliance: 33% compliance at baseline increased to 74% during the intervention week and to 54% at follow-up |
| Lechner et al. [ | To assess the effectiveness of a campus-wide anti-tobacco intervention | Longitudinal | Self-report | Tobacco-free campus with smoking cessation service |
| 4 year | Midwest | Intervention was not effective in reducing general smoking prevalence but significantly reduced proportions of high-frequency smokers and low-frequency smokers |
| Lee et al. [ | To examine differences in cigarette smoked on campus premises by campus policy strength | Cross-sectional | Cigarette butts were counted | Tobacco-free campus | NA | 2 year | Southeast | 100% tobacco-free college campuses had significantly fewer cigarette butts on premises than campuses with no outdoor restrictions |
| Lochbihler et al. [ | To determine social | Cross-sectional | Self-report | Designated smoking area | Sample 1: | 4 year | Midwestern | Social interaction while smoking on campus (as compared with smoking alone) significantly increased the perceived reward of smoking, looking forward to spending time in the campus smoking areas, and how many times the campus smoking areas were visited |
| Seo, Macy, Torabi, and Middlestadt [ | To assess change in students’ attitudes and behaviors due to policy implementation | Longitudinal | Self-report | Smoke-free campus |
| 4 year | Midwest | Compared with the control condition, students exposed to smoke-free campus policy showed significant reduction in smoking behavior. |
M Mean, SD Standard Deviation, W White, B Black/African American, H Hispanic, A Asian, AI/AN American Indian/Alaskan Native, NH/PI Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, M Mixed ethnicity, O Other ethnicity, F Female, T Transgender, NA Not applicable, NP Not Provided