TY - JOUR
T1 - State laws on youth access to tobacco in the United States
T2 - Measuring their extensiveness with a new rating system
AU - Alciati, Marianne H.
AU - Frosh, Marcy
AU - Green, Sylvan B.
AU - Brownson, Ross G.
AU - Fisher, Peter H.
AU - Hobart, Robin
AU - Roman, Adele
AU - Sciandra, Russell G.
AU - Shelton, Dana M.
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - Objective - To develop and implement a rating system evaluating the extensiveness of state laws restricting youth access to tobacco. Design - State laws on youth access to tobacco were analysed and assigned ratings on nine items. Six items addressed specific tobacco-control provisions, and three related to enforcement provisions. For each item, a target was specified reflecting public health objectives. Achieving the target resulted in a rating of +4 points; for three items, a rating of +5 was possible if the target was exceeded. Criteria for lower ratings were established for situations when the target was not met. Setting - United States. Results - State scores (sum of the ratings across all nine items) ranged from 0-18 in 1993, 2-21 in 1994, and 1-21 in 1995 and 1996, out of a possible total of 39. The average score across states was 7.2 in 1993, 7.9 in 1994, 8.2 in 1995, and 9.0 in 1996. The overall mean rating (per item) was 0.80 in 1993, 0.88 in 1994, 0.91 in 1995, and 1.00 in 1996, on a scale where 4.0 indicates that the target goals (per item) were met. From 1993 to 1996, scores increased for 20 states, decreased for one state, and remained unchanged for the others. The number of states for which state preemption of local tobacco regulation was a factor doubled from 10 states in 1993 to 20 states in 1996. Conclusions - Although all states have laws addressing youth access to tobacco, this analysis reveals that, as of the end of 1996, the progress towards meeting health policy targets is slow, and state legislation that preempts local tobacco regulation is becoming more common.
AB - Objective - To develop and implement a rating system evaluating the extensiveness of state laws restricting youth access to tobacco. Design - State laws on youth access to tobacco were analysed and assigned ratings on nine items. Six items addressed specific tobacco-control provisions, and three related to enforcement provisions. For each item, a target was specified reflecting public health objectives. Achieving the target resulted in a rating of +4 points; for three items, a rating of +5 was possible if the target was exceeded. Criteria for lower ratings were established for situations when the target was not met. Setting - United States. Results - State scores (sum of the ratings across all nine items) ranged from 0-18 in 1993, 2-21 in 1994, and 1-21 in 1995 and 1996, out of a possible total of 39. The average score across states was 7.2 in 1993, 7.9 in 1994, 8.2 in 1995, and 9.0 in 1996. The overall mean rating (per item) was 0.80 in 1993, 0.88 in 1994, 0.91 in 1995, and 1.00 in 1996, on a scale where 4.0 indicates that the target goals (per item) were met. From 1993 to 1996, scores increased for 20 states, decreased for one state, and remained unchanged for the others. The number of states for which state preemption of local tobacco regulation was a factor doubled from 10 states in 1993 to 20 states in 1996. Conclusions - Although all states have laws addressing youth access to tobacco, this analysis reveals that, as of the end of 1996, the progress towards meeting health policy targets is slow, and state legislation that preempts local tobacco regulation is becoming more common.
KW - Access laws
KW - Adolescents
KW - Legislation
KW - United States
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0032235047
U2 - 10.1136/tc.7.4.345
DO - 10.1136/tc.7.4.345
M3 - Article
C2 - 10093166
AN - SCOPUS:0032235047
SN - 0964-4563
VL - 7
SP - 345
EP - 352
JO - Tobacco Control
JF - Tobacco Control
IS - 4
ER -