Article

Association between tobacco control policies and current smoking across different occupational groups in the EU between 2009 and 2017

Details

Citation

So V, Best C, Currie D & Haw S (2019) Association between tobacco control policies and current smoking across different occupational groups in the EU between 2009 and 2017. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 73 (8), pp. 759-767. https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2018-211935

Abstract
Background This study investigated the cross-national and longitudinal associations between national tobacco control policies and current smoking in 28 European Union (EU) member states between 2009 and 2017. It also examined the interaction between tobacco control policies and occupational status. Methods We used data from four waves of Eurobarometer (2009, 2012, 2014 and 2017). The total sample size was 105,231 individuals aged ≥15 years. Tobacco Control Scale scores (range 0 to 100) for years 2005, 2007, 2012 and 2014 measured the strength of country-level tobacco control policies. Logistic multilevel regression analyses with three levels (the individual, the country-year and the country) were performed with current smoker as the dependent variable. Results Across the EU, average smoking prevalence fell from 29.4% (95% CI: 28.5% to 30.2%) in 2009 to 26.3% (95% CI: 25.4% to 27.1%) in 2017. We confirmed that cross-nationally, strong national tobacco control policies are significantly associated with low probability of smoking. A one-point increase in TCS score was associated with lower odds of smoking (OR = 0.990; 95% CI = 0.963 to 0.998), but longitudinally (within-country) increases in TCS were not associated with current smoking (OR = 0.999; 95% CI = 0.994 to 1.005). Compared to those in manual occupations, the cross-national association was stronger in the upper occupational group (Conditional OR for the interaction = 0.985; 95% CI = 0.978 to 0.992) and weaker in the economically inactive group (Conditional OR for the interaction 1.009; 95% CI: 1.005 to 1.013). Conclusion Differences in tobacco control policies between countries were associated with probability of smoking but changes in TCS within countries over time were not. Differences between countries in tobacco control policies were found to be most strongly associated with likelihood of smoking in the highest occupational groups and were found to have only a weak association with smoking among the economically inactive in this sample.

Journal
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health: Volume 73, Issue 8

StatusPublished
FundersCRUK Cancer Research UK
Publication date31/08/2019
Publication date online18/06/2019
Date accepted by journal04/05/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29455
ISSN0143-005X

People (1)

People

Dr Catherine Best

Dr Catherine Best

Lecturer Statistician, Institute for Social Marketing

Projects (1)