TY - JOUR
T1 - Feasibility and Impact of Local Retail Tobacco Policy in the United States
T2 - Views From Research and Practice
AU - Combs, Todd
AU - Chaitan, Veronica L.
AU - Mahoney, Margaret
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Society for Public Health Education
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Retail tobacco policymaking is increasing in the United States. This is due, in part, to increased recognition that greater tobacco retail density is associated with higher commercial tobacco product use rates and contributes to health disparities. Tobacco control practitioners, researchers, and attorneys were asked their thoughts on the feasibility and impact of 10 retail tobacco policies at the local level in the US. Policies included, for example, capping the number of tobacco retail licenses in communities, setting minimum distance requirements between tobacco retail locations, and flavored tobacco product sales prohibitions. Respondents were asked to give ratings on six dimensions: overall effectiveness, legal feasibility, political feasibility, economic impact, equity impact, and ease of enforcement. Fifty-one professionals responded, and 40 of them had more than 5 years of experience in tobacco control work. Legal feasibility and equity impact were rated highest across policies, and political feasibility the lowest. Ending all tobacco sales received the lowest average ratings across dimensions of feasibility and impact. Establishing tobacco retail licensing programs with fees received the highest average ratings across dimensions of feasibility and impact. The high ratings for licensing with fees can help support localities considering implementing this foundational policy, which increases knowledge of the pervasiveness of tobacco retail locations, allows for self-funded enforcement of existing laws, and can be combined with other policies that address tobacco retail density, prices, and products. Researchers and practitioners alike can focus on identifying strategies to address the lack of local political will for certain tobacco retail policies.
AB - Retail tobacco policymaking is increasing in the United States. This is due, in part, to increased recognition that greater tobacco retail density is associated with higher commercial tobacco product use rates and contributes to health disparities. Tobacco control practitioners, researchers, and attorneys were asked their thoughts on the feasibility and impact of 10 retail tobacco policies at the local level in the US. Policies included, for example, capping the number of tobacco retail licenses in communities, setting minimum distance requirements between tobacco retail locations, and flavored tobacco product sales prohibitions. Respondents were asked to give ratings on six dimensions: overall effectiveness, legal feasibility, political feasibility, economic impact, equity impact, and ease of enforcement. Fifty-one professionals responded, and 40 of them had more than 5 years of experience in tobacco control work. Legal feasibility and equity impact were rated highest across policies, and political feasibility the lowest. Ending all tobacco sales received the lowest average ratings across dimensions of feasibility and impact. Establishing tobacco retail licensing programs with fees received the highest average ratings across dimensions of feasibility and impact. The high ratings for licensing with fees can help support localities considering implementing this foundational policy, which increases knowledge of the pervasiveness of tobacco retail locations, allows for self-funded enforcement of existing laws, and can be combined with other policies that address tobacco retail density, prices, and products. Researchers and practitioners alike can focus on identifying strategies to address the lack of local political will for certain tobacco retail policies.
KW - built environment
KW - health equity
KW - health policy
KW - retail/retail environments
KW - surveys
KW - tobacco prevention and control
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024312446
U2 - 10.1177/15248399251362173
DO - 10.1177/15248399251362173
M3 - Article
C2 - 40842397
AN - SCOPUS:105024312446
SN - 1524-8399
JO - Health promotion practice
JF - Health promotion practice
ER -