Department of Health Behavior, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC.
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2020 Oct 8;22(10):1842-1850. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntaa046.
Minimum floor price laws (MFPLs) are an emerging tobacco control policy that sets a minimum price below which a specific tobacco product cannot be sold. MFPLs target cheaper products and may disproportionately impact consumers choosing low price brands or using discounts to reduce prices. We developed a static microsimulation model for California, United States to project short-term effects of different MFPL options for a 20-stick pack of cigarettes on adult smoking behaviors.
We simulated 300 000 individuals defined by race and ethnicity, sex, age, and poverty status. Smoking behaviors and cigarette prices were assigned based on demographic distributions in the 2014-2016 California Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System. We drew 100 random samples (n = 30 000), weighted to state-level California demographic characteristics. We simulated six MFPL options and modeled impacts on smoking prevalence and cigarette consumption, in general, and separately for those in households below or above 250% of the federal poverty level, assuming a price elasticity of -0.4.
Predicted changes in prices, prevalence, and consumption increased exponentially as the floor price increased from $7.00 to $9.50. Assuming 15% policy avoidance, projected increases in average cigarette prices ranged from $0.19 to $1.61. Decreases in smoking prevalence ranged from 0.05 to 0.43 percentage points, and decreases in average monthly cigarette consumption ranged from 1.4 to 12.3 cigarettes. Projected prices increased, and prevalence and consumption decreased, more among individuals in households below 250% federal poverty level.
MFPLs are a promising tobacco control strategy with the potential to reduce socioeconomic disparities in cigarette smoking prevalence and consumption.
Despite reductions in adult smoking prevalence, significant socioeconomic disparities remain, with lower-income groups smoking at substantially higher levels than higher-income groups. Policies that set a floor price below which a tobacco product cannot be sold could reduce socioeconomic disparities in smoking, depending on variation in prices paid by smokers prepolicy. By using a microsimulation model to predict changes in smoking for different population groups in California under several floor price scenarios, this study demonstrates that MFPLs have the potential to reduce adult smoking prevalence overall, and especially for lower-income tobacco users.
最低地板价法(MFPL)是一种新兴的控烟政策,它设定了一个低于该价格的最低价格,在此价格以下,特定的烟草产品不得销售。MFPL 针对的是更便宜的产品,可能会不成比例地影响选择低价品牌或使用折扣来降低价格的消费者。我们为美国加利福尼亚州开发了一个静态微观模拟模型,以预测 20 支装香烟不同 MFPL 方案对成年吸烟行为的短期影响。
我们模拟了 30 万名根据种族和民族、性别、年龄和贫困状况定义的个体。吸烟行为和香烟价格是根据 2014-2016 年加利福尼亚州行为风险因素监测系统的人口分布来分配的。我们抽取了 100 个随机样本(n=30000),并根据加利福尼亚州的州级人口特征进行了加权。我们模拟了六种 MFPL 方案,并分别对家庭收入低于或高于联邦贫困线 250%的人群的吸烟率和香烟消费情况进行了建模,假设价格弹性为-0.4。
随着最低价格从 7.00 美元增加到 9.50 美元,预测的价格、流行率和消费变化呈指数级增长。假设 15%的政策规避,预计平均香烟价格将上涨 0.19 美元至 1.61 美元。吸烟流行率预计将下降 0.05 至 0.43 个百分点,平均每月香烟消费预计将下降 1.4 至 12.3 支。在家庭收入低于联邦贫困线 250%的人群中,预计价格上涨、流行率和消费下降更为明显。
MFPL 是一种有前途的控烟策略,有可能减少吸烟在社会经济方面的差异。
尽管成年人吸烟率有所下降,但仍存在显著的社会经济差异,低收入群体的吸烟率远高于高收入群体。设定低于烟草产品售价的最低价格可能会减少吸烟的社会经济差异,具体取决于吸烟者在政策出台前支付的价格差异。本研究通过使用微观模拟模型预测加利福尼亚州不同人群在几种最低价格方案下的吸烟变化,表明 MFPL 有可能降低整体成年吸烟率,特别是对低收入烟草使用者。