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Tobacco

Although tobacco use has decreased, it is the leading cause of death in the United States. Implementing a combination of policy changes including clean indoor air laws, higher per-pack taxes, and cessation efforts are proven to reduce tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke.

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  • Topic: Tobacco
  • Program: Public Health
  • Massachusetts (MA) NE
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Teen Involvement is a Key to Reducing Adolescent Smoking

May 1, 1997 | Program Result Report

The University of Colorado, Denver, evaluated Stop Teenage Addiction to Tobacco (STAT), a nationwide volunteer effort to reduce underage smoking.

Sociedad Latina Connects Tobacco Sales with the Health of Young People

November 18, 2009 | Program Result Report

In the 1990s, Massachusetts led the nation in anti-smoking programs, but from 2000 to 2004, the state cut its funding for tobacco prevention by 95 percent.

Anti-Tobacco/Alcohol Messages Can Backfire with Middle School Students

March 1, 2003 | Program Result Report

The Harvard University Graduate School of Education studied adolescent risk behavior among middle grade students in the Cambridge, Mass., public school system.

Using the Postpartum Hospital Stay to Address Mothers' and Fathers' Smoking

March 1, 2010 | Journal Article

The short period when a woman is hospitalized to give birth is a critical opportunity to reach both mothers and fathers with tobacco control programs. According to this study, it is feasible and welcome to identify tobacco-using parents in a postpartum obstetric unit, enroll them in a study and link them to quitline support.

Addressing Tobacco in Health Care

July 11, 2009 | Program Result Report

Addressing Tobacco in Managed Care supported evaluations of replicable efforts by managed care organizations to integrate effective tobacco-cessation interventions into everyday clinical practice and the basic health care these organizations provide.

1997 Conference Studies Tobacco Control in States that Increased Tobacco Taxes

January 1, 2000 | Program Result Report

The Cancer Prevention and Control Center at Boston University Medical Center convened a conference at which representatives from four states that had passed tobacco tax initiatives discussed issues they had faced.

Prohibiting Tobacco Sales to Minors May Have Little Impact

May 31, 2000 | Program Result Report

From 1993 to 1996, the General Hospital Corporation, Boston, carried out a controlled study assessed tobacco sales to minors, youth access to tobacco, and youth tobacco use in six Massachusetts communities.

Massachusetts Ex-Smokers Rated Negative Ads as Most Effective

September 1, 2006 | Program Result Report

From February 1996 to August 1998, Lois Biener, Ph.D., and colleagues at the University of Massachusetts at Boston Center for Survey Research examined the reactions of adult residents in Massachusetts to the Massachusetts Tobacco Control Program.

Don't Hang Up! Smokers Use Hotline for Cooling Off

September 1, 2006 | Program Result Report

The Boston University School of Public Health evaluated the utilization and effectiveness of the statewide telephone-based Massachusetts Smokers' Quitline.

Laws Regulating Tobacco Sales and Industry Marketing Affect Teen Smoking Rates Says Survey in Massachusetts

December 9, 2005 | Program Result Report

Between November 1997 and February 1998, researchers from the Boston University School of Public Health conducted a follow-up survey of youth interviewed in the 1993 Massachusetts Tobacco Survey of Youth.

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