Harm reduction for smokers with little to no quit interest: can tobacco policies encourage switching to e-cigarettes?

Author:

Buckell JohnORCID,Fucito Lisa M,Krishnan-Sarin Suchitra,O'Malley Stephanie,Sindelar Jody L

Abstract

ObjectiveA pressing tobacco policy concern is how to help smokers who have little interest in quitting cigarettes, a group that often suffers severe health consequences. By switching from cigarettes to e-cigarettes, they could obtain nicotine, potentially with less harm. We examined if policy-relevant attributes of cigarettes/e-cigarettes might encourage these smokers to switch to e-cigarettes.MethodsAn online survey and discrete choice experiment on a nationally-representative sample of adult smokers in the US who reported low interest in quitting (n=2000). We modelled preference heterogeneity using a latent class, latent variable model. We simulated policies that could encourage switching to e-cigarettes.ResultsParticipants formed two latent classes: (1) those with very strong preferences for their own cigarettes; and (2) those whose choices were more responsive to policies. The latter group’s choices were only somewhat responsive to menthol cigarette bans and taxes; the former group’s choices were unresponsive.ConclusionsThe policies studied seem unlikely to encourage harm reduction for individuals with little interest in quitting smoking.

Funder

National Institute on Drug Abuse

National Institute for Health Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

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

Reference32 articles.

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