Fifty-year forecasts of daily smoking prevalence: can Australia reach 5% by 2030?

Author:

Wade StephenORCID,Weber Marianne FORCID,Sarich PeterORCID,Caruana MichaelORCID,Watts ChristinaORCID,Vaneckova PavlaORCID,Ngo PrestonORCID,Cressman SonyaORCID,Scollo MichelleORCID,Banks EmilyORCID,Gartner Coral EORCID,Grogan Paul B,Blakely TonyORCID,Tammemagi Martin CORCID,Canfell KarenORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo compare 50-year forecasts of Australian tobacco smoking rates in relation to trends in smoking initiation and cessation and in relation to a national target of ≤5% adult daily prevalence by 2030.MethodsA compartmental model of Australian population daily smoking, calibrated to the observed smoking status of 229 523 participants aged 20–99 years in 26 surveys (1962–2016) by age, sex and birth year (1910–1996), estimated smoking prevalence to 2066 using Australian Bureau of Statistics 50-year population predictions. Prevalence forecasts were compared across scenarios in which smoking initiation and cessation trends from 2017 were continued, kept constant or reversed.ResultsAt the end of the observation period in 2016, model-estimated daily smoking prevalence was 13.7% (90% equal-tailed interval (EI) 13.4%–14.0%). When smoking initiation and cessation rates were held constant, daily smoking prevalence reached 5.2% (90% EI 4.9%–5.5%) after 50 years, in 2066. When initiation and cessation rates continued their trajectory downwards and upwards, respectively, daily smoking prevalence reached 5% by 2039 (90% EI 2037–2041). The greatest progress towards the 5% goal came from eliminating initiation among younger cohorts, with the target met by 2037 (90% EI 2036–2038) in the most optimistic scenario. Conversely, if initiation and cessation rates reversed to 2007 levels, estimated prevalence was 9.1% (90% EI 8.8%–9.4%) in 2066.ConclusionA 5% adult daily smoking prevalence target cannot be achieved by the year 2030 based on current trends. Urgent investment in concerted strategies that prevent smoking initiation and facilitate cessation is necessary to achieve 5% prevalence by 2030.

Funder

Australian Government Department of Health

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health (social science)

Reference23 articles.

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