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Underage Cigarette Sales and High School Smoking

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Enter stores alone, ask for cigarettes. ... distribution of cigarettes, 2004 vs. ... Rigorous enforcement of cigarette sales regulations is associated with: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Underage Cigarette Sales and High School Smoking


1
Underage Cigarette Sales andHigh School Smoking
  • An intervention study
  • in Fort Morgan, Colo.

Theresa Mickiewicz, MSPHDetective Loren
SharpArnold Levinson, PhD
2
Background
  • Laws against selling cigarettes
  • to minors (under age 18).
  • Surveys show teens buy anyway.
  • Conventional enforcement ineffective.
  • If underage sales truly stop,
  • what happens to teen smoking
  • and cigarette sharing?

3
Research questions
  • Can we really stop underage sales?
  • If yes
  • what happens to supplies?
  • what happens to social exchange?
  • what happens to smoking?

4
Fort Morgan Intervention
  • Non-smoking minors with good grades and
    citizenship.
  • Supervised by undercover officer.
  • Enter stores alone, ask for cigarettes.
  • Allowed to become regular customer first (buy a
    beverage, small snack).

5
Intervention, cont.
  • Clerk violators warned first time, ticketed for
    both sales second time.
  • Store violators state penalties.

6
Enforcement data
  • All stores in city (34), 2 in Morgan County.
  • 768 total purchase attempts (average 23 per
    store).
  • 43 total violations.

7
Pattern of underage sales
  • INSERT CHART HERE

8
Interpretation
  • Underage sales greatly reduced?
  • Cover blown in study operation?

9
Annual student survey
  • Smoking history and status.
  • How students get cigarettes.
  • Social exchange of cigarettes.
  • Analyzed ages 14-17, Anglo or Hispanic.
  • Adjusted for age, sex, ethnicity.

10
Usual ways to get cigs (current),2004 vs. 2005
2004-05 difference, p 11
Usual ways to get cigs (frequent),2004 vs. 2005
2004-05 difference, p 12
Clerk behaviors
2004-05 difference, p0.05
13
Clerk behaviors
2004-05 difference, p 14
Store behaviors
p 15
Social distribution of cigarettes,2004 vs. 2005
  • No change in frequency ( days in the last month)
    of carrying cigarettes ...
  • BUT
  • ... scarcer supplies when carrying (10.5 cigs
    vs. 13.3 cigs, p0.001)
  • reduced supply by 21

16
More asking, more refusing, 2004 vs. 2005
pp 17
Not as easy to ask for a cigarette, 2004 vs. 2005
p0.002
18
Smoking status,2004 vs. 2005
p0.002
p0.02
19
Current smokers
  • No change in smoking frequency or amount ...
  • BUT ...
  • Increase in serious quit attempts, 50 vs. 60
    (p

20
Conclusions
  • Rigorous enforcement of cigarette sales
    regulations is associated with
  • increased clerk monitoring of age
  • reduced cigarette sales to minors
  • no clear source-shifting
  • reduced number of violating stores
  • reduced cigarette supplies in the social-exchange
    marketplace
  • reduced teen smoking
  • increased teen quit attempts

21
Limitations / Next Steps
  • Study design cant prove enforcement caused
    changes
  • Long-term effects unknown
  • stores stay compliant?
  • adult smoking prevented? delayed? unaffected?
  • Cost-benefit balance unknown
  • Tobacco tax effects?
  • Above unknowns should be studied

22
Acknowledgements
  • This research was supported by the Colorado
    Alcohol and Drug Abuse Division.
  • Enforcement was conducted by the
  • Fort Morgan Police Department and the Colorado
    Tobacco Enforcement Unit.
  • Special thanks to the anonymous Fort Morgan teens
    who helped protect adolescents from cigarette
    addiction.
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