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Canada’s Youth Smoking Survey: A National Resource 1994-2007. Steve Manske, EdD Chris Lovato, PhD Bill Morrison, PhD 3 November 2009 NCTH. Concurrent Session Objectives. (Re-)Introduce participants to YSS Provide examples of use of data
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Canada’s Youth Smoking Survey: A National Resource 1994-2007 Steve Manske, EdD Chris Lovato, PhD Bill Morrison, PhD 3 November 2009 NCTH
Concurrent Session Objectives • (Re-)Introduce participants to YSS • Provide examples of use of data • Describe ways to make obtaining quality data from national surveys sustainable • Discuss opportunities for use of YSS • As a platform to collect data • As a mechanism to ask policy and practice-related questions
Trends in Youth Tobacco Use in Canada: YSS 1994-2007 Manske S, Murnaghan D, MacDonald M, Wong K, Ahmed R, Burkhalter R for YSS Collaborative 3 November 2009 NCTH
YSS Introduction • Bi-annual Youth Smoking Survey informs national and provincial tobacco control policy and practice. • Each cycle contains up to 467 schools and 71,000 students in grades 5-12. • Data collected characterize • tobacco usage (e.g., cigarettes, cigarillos, smokeless) • susceptibility and onset • quitting • potential correlates (e.g., knowledge, attitudes, social influences, marketing, restrictions, school connectedness, alcohol & other drug use).
YSS: Opportunities for you too! • Rich data create multiple opportunities for policy and program relevant research. • YSS platform (consortium of investigators from 10 provinces) provides opportunity to collaborate in data collection. E.g., • School –level policy & program information • Complementary topics • Public files available at each university
Trends in Smoking Onset • Decreased by half since 1994, about equally in males & females • More dramatic decrease in younger students • Some western provinces seem to be bucking the trend in the latest YSS (BC, SK, MB) • Did these tryers really go away, or are they hiding?
Susceptibility • It’s also decreasing nationally, in both sexes. • Smaller decrease in older students. • QC, ON, BC appear highest
Use of Cigarettes in Past 30 Days • Very dramatic reductions from 1994, but leveling off in last two cycles. • Similar patterns for males and females, and by grade. • Appears the leveling off is actually a reversal in three provinces (BC, QC, MB)
Use of Any Tobacco Product (except cigarettes) • Tobacco company marketing may simply have shifted the emphasis from cigarettes to other products. Therefore, we examine use of any tobacco product. • These too, have been cut in half, but more dramatic in younger students than older.
Use of Any Tobacco Product (except cigarettes) by Sex & Grade, YSS
Use of Any Tobacco Product (except cigarettes) by Province, YSS
Current Smokers • Similar pattern to “ever try”. Celebrate success of reducing by more than half. Consistent for males and females. • Continues to be trend for greater likelihood that older youth smoke. • Provincial discrepancies: none higher than 6%; NL lowest at 1%; traditional leader (BC) seeing rebound – similar to susceptibility
Pipes or Cigars, YSS • Of concern because of change in marketing • Generally 04 and 06-07 level, but exceptions in BC, QC & PE
Ever Tried to Quit • Not too much movement since 1994, but did seem to be increases in middle years. • Current data show NL & AB are concerns, where quit attempts have dropped dramatically in the latest round, to almost half of what they were previously.
Sources of Cigarettes (smoked last 30 days), YSS • Created a dichotomous variable that where youth who smoked in past 30 days indicated where they obtained their cigarettes – either social source, or retail source (includes the variety of them like corner stores and contraband). • What is striking is the low percentage (as low as 1% in NL) who are obtaining from retail sources – these are younger kids, and the campaigns appear to have helped • Of concern is that social sources are continuing to help the behaviour thrive. • Males are twice as likely to obtain cigarettes from retail • No province has more than 17% of cigarettes used by youth in grades 7-9 available through retail sources.
Social Influences (any friends who smoke), by Sex & Grade, YSS
Conclusions • Concern that policy makers and program people will let the ball drop with relatively low rates • Need to point out exceptions that tobacco industry is now marketing to • Recent legislation banning flavoured cigars and cigarillos is a victory in part due to surveys like YSS • The data are publicly available to answer additional questions
Members of Youth Smoking Survey Collaborative • NL: Antony Card, Shirley Solberg • PE: Donna Murnaghan • NS: Meg McCallum • NB: Bill Morrison • QC: Jennifer O’Loughlin, Cathi Sabiston • ON: Steve Manske, Scott Leatherdale • MB: Jane Griffith • SK: June Blau • AB: Cameron Wild, Candace Nykiforuk • BC: Chris Lovato, Marjorie MacDonald
Acknowledgment • Production of this presentation has been made possible through a financial contribution from Health Canada. • The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the views of Health Canada. • Go to www.yss.uwaterloo.ca for an electronic version of these slides.