Tobacco Induced Diseases (Jan 2013)

Comparing effects of tobacco use prevention modalities: need for complex system models

  • Steve Sussman,
  • David Levy,
  • Kristen Hassmiller Lich,
  • Crystal W Cené,
  • Mimi M Kim,
  • Louise A Rohrbach,
  • Frank J Chaloupka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1617-9625-11-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. January

Abstract

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Many modalities of tobacco use prevention programming have been implemented including various policy regulations (tax increases, warning labels, limits on access, smoke-free policies, and restrictions on marketing), mass media programming, school-based classroom education, family involvement, and involvement of community agents (i.e., medical, social, political). The present manuscript provides a glance at these modalities to compare relative and combined impact of them on youth tobacco use. In a majority of trials, community-wide programming, which includes multiple modalities, has not been found to achieve impacts greater than single modality programming. Possibly, the most effective means of prevention involves a careful selection of program type combinations. Also, it is likely that a mechanism for coordinating maximally across program types (e.g., staging of programming) is needed to encourage a synergistic impact. Studying tobacco use prevention as a complex system is considered as a means to maximize effects from combinations of prevention types. Future studies will need to more systematically consider the role of combined programming.

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