Literature DB >> 30543609

Modelling the number of quitters needed to achieve New Zealand's Smokefree 2025 goal for Māori and non-Māori.

Nick Wilson1, Frederieke Sanne Petrović-van der Deen1, Richard Edwards1, Andrew Waa1, Tony Blakely1.   

Abstract

AIM: To estimate the numbers of people required to quit smoking in New Zealand to achieve the Smokefree 2025 goal and to compare these with current levels of quitting.
METHODS: We used the established BODE3 tobacco forecasting model to project smoking prevalence separately for Māori and non-Māori to 2025 under a business-as-usual (BAU) scenario. We then determined by what factor current annual cessation rates would have to increase to achieve an adult smoking prevalence of under 5% by the year 2025, while annual smoking uptake rates continued to follow BAU patterns. Comparisons were also made in terms of estimated current long-term quitters arising from official reports of smoking cessation service use (Quitline and face-to-face support services).
RESULTS: To achieve a below 5% smoking prevalence by 2025, there would need to be additional averages of 8,400 Māori long-term quitters per year (5.2 times the BAU level on average) and 8,800 extra non-Māori quitters per year during 2018 to 2025 (1.9 times the BAU level on average). We estimated that the Quitline and funded face-to-face smoking cessation services are generating 2,000 Māori and 6,100 non-Māori long-term quitters per year. But this represents only 19% of Māori and only 34% of the non-Māori quitters required.
CONCLUSIONS: This modelling work suggests that to achieve the Smokefree 2025 goal, there would need to be very major increases in quit rates. To achieve this goal the New Zealand Government will need to massively increase investment in established interventions (smoking cessation support, mass media) while continuing with substantial tobacco tax increases, or else add substantive new strategies into the intervention mix.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30543609

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Z Med J        ISSN: 0028-8446


  2 in total

1.  Mass media promotion of a smartphone smoking cessation app: modelled health and cost-saving impacts.

Authors:  Nhung Nghiem; William Leung; Christine Cleghorn; Tony Blakely; Nick Wilson
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2019-03-08       Impact factor: 3.295

2.  Foundation for a Smoke-Free World and healthy Indigenous futures: an oxymoron?

Authors:  Andrew Waa; Bridget Robson; Heather Gifford; Janet Smylie; Jeff Reading; Jeffrey A Henderson; Patricia Nez Henderson; Raglan Maddox; Raymond Lovett; Sandra Eades; Summer Finlay; Tom Calma
Journal:  Tob Control       Date:  2019-05-10       Impact factor: 7.552

  2 in total

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