MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
Centre for Research on Environment, Society and Health, School of GeoSciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Tob Control. 2021 Dec;30(e2):e138-e143. doi: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2020-056002. Epub 2020 Nov 4.
Reducing the provision of tobacco is important for decreasing inequalities in smoking and smoking-related harm. Various policies have been proposed to achieve this, but their impacts-particularly on equity-are often unknown. Here, using national-level data, we simulate the impacts of potential policies designed to reduce tobacco outlet density (TOD).
Tobacco retailer locations (n=9030) were geocoded from Scotland's national register, forming a baseline. Twelve policies were developed in three types: (1) regulating type of retailer selling tobacco, (2) regulating location of tobacco sales, and (3) area-based TOD caps. Density reduction was measured as mean percentage reduction in TOD across data zones and number of retailers nationally. Equity impact was measured using regression-based Relative Index of Inequality (RII) across income deprivation quintiles.
Policies restricting tobacco sales to a single outlet type ('Supermarket'; 'Liquor store'; 'Pharmacy') caused >80% TOD reduction and >90% reduction in the number of tobacco outlets nationally. However, RIIs indicated that two of these policies ('Liquor store', 'Pharmacy') increased socioeconomic inequalities in TOD. Equity-promoting policies included 'Minimum spacing' and exclusion zones around 'Child spaces'. The only policy to remove statistically significant TOD inequalities was the one deliberately targeted to do so ('Reduce clusters').
Using spatial simulations, we show that all selected policies reduced provision of tobacco retailing to varying degrees. However, the most 'successful' at doing so also increased inequalities. Consequently, policy-makers should consider how the methods by which tobacco retail density is reduced, and success measured, align with policy aims.
减少烟草供应对于减少吸烟和与吸烟相关的危害方面的不平等至关重要。已经提出了各种政策来实现这一目标,但它们的影响,尤其是公平性方面的影响,往往不为人知。在这里,我们利用国家级数据模拟了旨在降低烟草销售点密度(TOD)的潜在政策的影响。
从苏格兰国家登记册中对烟草零售商的位置(n=9030)进行地理编码,形成一个基线。开发了十二种政策,分为三种类型:(1)监管销售烟草的零售商类型,(2)监管烟草销售地点,(3)基于区域的 TOD 上限。通过数据区域内 TOD 的平均百分比降低和全国零售商数量的减少来衡量密度降低。使用基于回归的相对不平等指数(RII)衡量收入剥夺五分位数的公平性影响。
限制烟草销售仅限于单一零售商类型的政策(“超市”;“酒类商店”;“药店”)导致超过 80%的 TOD 减少和全国烟草零售商数量减少超过 90%。然而,RII 表明,这些政策中的两项(“酒类商店”和“药店”)增加了 TOD 方面的社会经济不平等。促进公平的政策包括“最小间距”和“儿童空间”周围的排除区。唯一一项消除 TOD 统计显著不平等的政策是专门针对这一政策的政策(“减少集群”)。
通过空间模拟,我们表明所有选定的政策都在不同程度上降低了烟草零售供应。然而,最“成功”的政策也增加了不平等。因此,政策制定者应考虑如何调整减少烟草零售密度的方法,并根据政策目标衡量成功。