Health Promotion Division, Public Health Foundation of India, Gurugram, India.
Department of Non-communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), London, UK.
Tob Control. 2020 Jan;29(1):103-110. doi: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2018-054621. Epub 2018 Dec 15.
Despite the importance of decreasing tobacco use to achieve mortality reduction targets of the Sustainable Development Goals in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), evaluations of tobacco control programmes in these settings are scarce. We assessed the impacts of India's National Tobacco Control Programme (NTCP), as implemented in 42 districts during 2007-2009, on household-reported consumption of bidis and cigarettes.
Secondary analysis of cross-sectional data from nationally representative Household Consumer Expenditure Surveys (1999-2000; 2004-2005 and 2011-2012). Outcomes were: any bidi/cigarette consumption in the household and monthly consumption of bidi/cigarette sticks per person. A difference-in-differences two-part model was used to compare changes in bidi/cigarette consumption between NTCP intervention and control districts, adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics and time-based heterogeneity.
There was an overall decline in household-reported bidi and cigarette consumption between 1999-2000 and 2011-2012. However, compared with control districts, NTCP districts had no significantly different reductions in the proportions of households reporting bidi (adjusted OR (AOR): 1.03, 95% CI: 0.84 to 1.28) or cigarette (AOR: 1.01 to 95% CI: 0.82 to 1.26) consumption, or for the monthly per person consumption of bidi (adjusted coefficient: 0.07, 95% CI: -0.13 to 0.28) or cigarette (adjusted coefficient: -0.002, 95% CI: -0.26 to 0.26) sticks among bidi/cigarette consuming households.
Our findings indicate that early implementation of the NTCP may not have produced reductions in tobacco use reflecting generally poor performance against the Framework Convention for Tobacco Control objectives in India. This study highlights the importance of strengthening the implementation and enforcement of tobacco control policies in LMICs to achieve national and international child health and premature NCD mortality reduction targets.
尽管减少烟草使用对于实现中低收入国家(LMICs)可持续发展目标中的死亡率降低目标至关重要,但对这些国家中烟草控制项目的评估却很少。我们评估了印度国家烟草控制计划(NTCP)在 2007-2009 年期间在 42 个地区实施的效果,该计划旨在减少家庭报告的比迪烟和香烟消费。
利用全国代表性家庭消费者支出调查(1999-2000 年;2004-2005 年和 2011-2012 年)的横断面数据进行二次分析。结果为:家庭中任何比迪烟/香烟消费以及每人每月比迪烟/香烟的消费。采用差异-差异两部分模型比较 NTCP 干预和对照地区之间比迪烟/香烟消费的变化,调整了社会人口统计学特征和基于时间的异质性。
家庭报告的比迪烟和香烟消费在 1999-2000 年至 2011-2012 年期间总体呈下降趋势。然而,与对照地区相比,NTCP 地区报告比迪烟消费的家庭比例没有显著减少(调整后的比值比(AOR):1.03,95%置信区间(CI):0.84 至 1.28)或香烟消费(AOR:1.01 至 95%CI:0.82 至 1.26),或比迪烟(调整后的系数:0.07,95%CI:-0.13 至 0.28)或香烟(调整后的系数:-0.002,95%CI:-0.26 至 0.26)消费的家庭每月人均消费也没有显著减少。
我们的研究结果表明,NTCP 的早期实施可能没有减少烟草使用,这反映出印度在实施《烟草控制框架公约》目标方面表现不佳。本研究强调了在 LMICs 加强烟草控制政策的实施和执行的重要性,以实现国家和国际儿童健康和预防非传染性疾病过早死亡的目标。