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1. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use
2. Background on ASH Action on Smoking & Health (ASH) is Western Canada’s leading health agency devoted to tobacco reduction
Founded in 1979, ASH is one of Canada’s longest serving tobacco control organizations
ASH has provided local, regional, provincial and national leadership
3. ASH’s strategies include: Public awareness and education
Healthy public policy
Media advocacy and promotion
Community mobilization
4. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic Tobacco use is the leading avoidable
killer in Alberta - an estimated 3,458 deaths resulted from smoking in 1997
Twenty percent of all deaths in Alberta (one in five) result from tobacco use
Tobacco kills more Albertans than alcohol, traffic accidents, suicide, illicit drug use, and AIDS combined
Source: Alberta Tobacco Control Centre
5. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic Unique characteristics of tobacco:
no safe level of consumption
nicotine is highly addictive
the vast majority of users are addicted
tobacco is the only legal product known to be lethal when used exactly as intended by its manufacturers
6. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic Smoking rate in Canada, 1996: 27%
Smoking rate in Alberta, 1996: 28%
Smoking rate in Northern Lights
Health Region, 1996: 39%
Source: 1995/96 National Population Health Survey
7. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic Smoking rate in Canada, 1999: 25%
Smoking rate in Alberta, 1999: 26%
Smoking rate in B.C., 1999: 20%
Source: Canadian Tobacco Use Monitoring Survey, Health Canada
8. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic Smoking rate in Canada, 1999: 25%
Smoking rate in Alberta, 1999: 26%
Smoking rate in B.C., 1999: 20%
Source: Canadian Tobacco Use Monitoring Survey, Health Canada
9. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic More than 35,000 potential years of life were sacrificed to tobacco use in Alberta in 1992
An estimated 300,000 hospital days are attributed to tobacco use annually
Of course, the human costs of this epidemic are intangible
Source: Canadian Centre for Substance Abuse, 1996
10. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic Tobacco use cost the Alberta economy $728 million in 1992 alone
These costs include:
Direct health care costs $215 million
Productivity losses $508 million
Other* $ 5 million
*Other includes prevention investment of less than $1 million
Source: Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse
11. Alberta’s Tobacco Epidemic Cost of Smoking in the Workplace per
Smoking Employee - Canada, 1995
Decreased productivity $ 2,175
Increased absenteeism 230
Increased life insurance 75
Smoking area costs 85
TOTAL = $ 2,565
Source: Conference Board of Canada, 1995
12. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Recent Best-Practice Reports:
U.S. Task Force on Community Preventive Services, 2001
U.S. Surgeon General, 2000
U.S. Public Health Service, 2000
U.S. National Association of City and County Health Officials, 2000
U.S. Centres for Disease Control, 1999
13. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use The most effective strategies include:
1. Tobacco tax increases
2. Smoking bans and restrictions
3. Mass media education
14. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Effective cessation strategies include:
Provider reminder systems
Provider reminder + provider education
Treatment subsidy programs
Telephone quitlines
15. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Insufficient evidence
Smoke-free home campaigns
Smoking cessation media series
Smoking cessation contests
Standalone provider education
Provider feedback system
16. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Success stories
California, Massachusetts, Oregon, and Florida have been achieving record-setting declines in tobacco use
Strategies include tax/price increases, smoking bans, mass media education, and comprehensive, well-funded evidence-based program
17. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Results:
Tobacco consumption is down by over 50% in California since 1988
Smoking prevalence has dropped from 23% to 18% since 1988
Lung cancer and heart disease have declined by 14%-15%
18. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use No Canadian jurisdiction has adopted a comprehensive evidence-based strategy that reflects available best-practice guidelines
$5/capita to $10/capita is required for a comprehensive, evidence-based strategy
Bill S-15 would provide the required funding through a 19 cent/carton levy applied to tobacco manufacturers
19. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use AADAC is leading the development of an intergovernmental strategy that will be announced this spring
The need for more tobacco reduction initiatives was addresses in the Throne Speech and the PC Election Platform
Health Minister Gary Mar is committed
20. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Program and Funding Guidelines for Comprehensive Local Tobacco Control Programs
- U.S. National Association of City and County Health Officials (NACCHO)
- Based on CDC Best Practice Guidelines
21. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Components of NACCHO Guidelines
1. Community programs
2. School Programs
3. Counter-Marketing
4. Cessation
22. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Components of NACCHO Guidelines
5. Enforcement
6. Administration and Management
7. Surveillance and Evaluation
23. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Examples of local programs
Community education of the health effects of secondhand smoke
School-based prevention programs
Community mobilization for a local tobacco licensing bylaw
Subsidized cessation treatment
24. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use More examples:
Pre/post natal education program
Merchant enforcement program
Regional telephone quitline
Youth-driven counter-marketing effort
Provider education initiative
25. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use The Costs (urban/rural region)
1. Community education $ .94
2. School programs .88
3. Counter-marketing .68
4. Cessation 1.44
5. Enforcement .40
6. Surveillance and evaluation .44
7. Administration and management __.22
TOTAL = $5.00/capita
26. Effective Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Rationale:
Northern Lights Region has the highest smoking prevalence in Alberta
Smoking rates among Aboriginals and 20-24 year-old blue collar/pink collar workers is particularly high
A major first step has already been taken with the passage of the smoke-free bylaw
Northern Lights could be a national model for other health regions