Boston College, School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA.
Boston College, School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA; Boston College, Department of Economics, Maloney Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA; German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Department of Macroeconomics, Mohrenstraße 58, 10117 Berlin, Germany.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019 Dec 1;205:107634. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.107634. Epub 2019 Oct 18.
Research has demonstrated that the implementation of tobacco control policies is associated with improved birth outcomes. Ascertainment of prenatal smoking on the US birth certificate has changed over the past decade to record smoking across each trimester.
Using 2005-2015 birth certificate data on 26,436,541 singletons from 47 states and DC linked to state-level cigarette taxes and smoke-free legislation, we conducted conditional mixed-process models to examine the impact of tobacco control policies on prenatal smoking and quitting, then on the associated changes in birth outcomes. We included interactions between race/ethnicity, education, and taxes and present average marginal effects.
Among white and black mothers with less than a high school degree, 36.0% and 14.1%, respectively, smoked during the first trimester and their babies had the poorest birth outcomes. However, they were the most responsive to cigarette taxes. Every $1.00 increase in taxes was associated with a 3.45 percentage point decrease in prenatal smoking among white mothers and a 1.20 percentage point decrease among black mothers. These reductions translated to increases in birth weight by 4.19 g for babies born to white mothers and 0.89 g for babies born to black mothers. Among smokers, there was some evidence that taxes increased quitting and improved birth outcomes, although most associations were not statistically significant. We found limited effects of smoke-free legislation on smoking, quitting or birth outcomes.
Cigarette taxes continue to have important downstream effects on reducing prenatal smoking and improving birth outcomes among the most vulnerable mothers and infants.
研究表明,实施烟草控制政策与改善生育结果有关。美国出生证明上对孕妇吸烟情况的记录在过去十年中发生了变化,改为记录每个孕期的吸烟情况。
我们利用来自 47 个州和哥伦比亚特区的 26436541 名单胎妊娠的 2005-2015 年出生证明数据,并将其与州级香烟税和无烟立法相关联,采用条件混合过程模型来检验烟草控制政策对孕妇吸烟和戒烟的影响,然后再检验其对生育结果的相关变化。我们纳入了种族/民族、教育和税收之间的交互作用,并呈现了平均边际效应。
在受教育程度低于高中学历的白人和黑人母亲中,分别有 36.0%和 14.1%的人在第一孕期吸烟,她们的婴儿出生结局最差。然而,她们对香烟税的反应最敏感。每增加 1 美元的税收,白人母亲的孕期吸烟率就会下降 3.45 个百分点,黑人母亲的孕期吸烟率下降 1.20 个百分点。这些降幅分别使白人母亲所生孩子的出生体重增加 4.19 克,黑人母亲所生孩子的出生体重增加 0.89 克。在吸烟者中,有一些证据表明税收增加了戒烟率并改善了出生结局,但大多数关联没有统计学意义。我们发现无烟立法对吸烟、戒烟或出生结局的影响有限。
香烟税继续对减少最脆弱的母亲和婴儿的孕期吸烟率和改善出生结局产生重要的下游影响。