Ashley M J, Cohen J, Bull S, Ferrence R, Poland B, Pederson L, Gao J
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto, ON.
Can J Public Health. 2000 Sep-Oct;91(5):376-80. doi: 10.1007/BF03404811.
Using data from a 1996 random-digit-dialing computer-assisted telephone survey of Ontario adults, 424 smokers and 1,340 nonsmokers were compared regarding knowledge about the health effects of tobacco use, attitudes toward restrictions on smoking and other tobacco control measures, and predictions of compliance with more restrictions. The response rate was 65%. Smokers were less knowledgeable than nonsmokers. Smokers were also less likely to support bans on smoking in specific locations, but majorities of both groups supported some restriction in most settings. Smokers were more likely than nonsmokers to predict that most smokers would comply with more restrictions, and more than three quarters indicated that they, themselves, would comply. Sizable proportions of both groups, especially smokers, failed to appreciate the effectiveness of taxation in reducing smoking. Support for other control measures also differed by smoking status. Both knowledge and smoking status were independently associated with support for more restrictions and other tobacco control policy measures.
利用1996年对安大略省成年人进行的随机数字拨号计算机辅助电话调查数据,对424名吸烟者和1340名不吸烟者在烟草使用对健康影响的知识、对吸烟限制及其他烟草控制措施的态度以及对遵守更多限制的预测方面进行了比较。回应率为65%。吸烟者比不吸烟者知识更少。吸烟者也不太可能支持在特定场所禁烟,但两组中的大多数人在大多数情况下都支持一些限制措施。吸烟者比不吸烟者更有可能预测大多数吸烟者会遵守更多限制,超过四分之三的人表示他们自己会遵守。两组中相当大比例的人,尤其是吸烟者,没有认识到税收在减少吸烟方面的有效性。对其他控制措施的支持也因吸烟状况而异。知识和吸烟状况都与支持更多限制及其他烟草控制政策措施独立相关。