Department of Health, Kinesiology, & Recreation, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Jun 29;15(6):e0235496. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0235496. eCollection 2020.
Over 120 US jurisdictions have implemented policies mandating minimum cigar pack quantities, yet little empirical research exists on the relationship between pack quantity and use. We examined whether cigar use was associated with purchasing cigars by the box/pack or as singles, purchase quantity, and price paid per cigar.
Data are from Waves 1-3 (2013-2016) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, analyzed in 2019. The sample included adults who reported current use of any type of cigars (cigarillos [N = 3,051], traditional cigars [N = 2,586], and filtered cigars [N = 1,295], including with marijuana) at Wave 1. For each cigar type, a generalized estimating equation model was used to examine the population-averaged effects of purchasing behavior on cigar use.
Cigar users of each type who purchased by the box or pack smoked more per day than users who purchased singles (cigarillos: β = 1.02, p<0.0001; traditional cigars: β = 1.40, p<0.0001; filtered cigars: β = 2.55, p<0.01). Cigar users who purchased larger quantities smoked more per day (cigarillos: β = 0.16, p<0.0001; traditional cigars: β = 0.04, p<0.0001; filtered cigars: β = 0.24, p<0.0001). Higher price per cigar was significantly associated with smoking fewer traditional cigars (β = -0.12, p<0.01) and filtered cigars (β = -0.86, p = 0.02), but not cigarillos (β = 0.08, p = 0.62).
Smaller pack quantities and higher price per cigar were associated with smoking fewer cigars per day. Given the authority of the Food and Drug Administration and local jurisdictions over cigar pack quantity, this study provides data pertinent to potential minimum and maximum package quantity regulations and policies.
超过 120 个美国司法管辖区已实施了规定雪茄包装最低数量的政策,但关于包装数量与使用之间关系的实证研究很少。我们研究了雪茄的使用是否与整盒/包购买或单支购买、购买数量以及每支雪茄的价格有关。
数据来自 2013-2016 年人口烟草与健康评估(PATH)研究的第 1-3 波(2019 年分析)。样本包括在第 1 波报告当前使用任何类型雪茄(小雪茄[3051 人]、传统雪茄[2586 人]和过滤雪茄[1295 人],包括与大麻一起使用)的成年人。对于每种雪茄类型,使用广义估计方程模型来检验购买行为对雪茄使用的总体平均影响。
每种类型的雪茄使用者,整盒或整包购买的人比购买单支的人每天吸烟更多(小雪茄:β=1.02,p<0.0001;传统雪茄:β=1.40,p<0.0001;过滤雪茄:β=2.55,p<0.01)。购买数量较大的雪茄使用者每天吸烟量也更多(小雪茄:β=0.16,p<0.0001;传统雪茄:β=0.04,p<0.0001;过滤雪茄:β=0.24,p<0.0001)。每支雪茄的价格较高与每天吸烟量较少的传统雪茄(β=-0.12,p<0.01)和过滤雪茄(β=-0.86,p=0.02)有关,但与小雪茄无关(β=0.08,p=0.62)。
包装数量较小和每支雪茄价格较高与每天吸烟量较少有关。鉴于食品和药物管理局以及地方司法管辖区对雪茄包装数量的权威,本研究提供了与潜在的最小和最大包装数量法规和政策相关的数据。