Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Int J Drug Policy. 2022 Jan;99:103436. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2021.103436. Epub 2021 Sep 15.
In May 2018, the Secretariat for the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control convened a meeting to discuss the potential for reducing the addictiveness of tobacco products. A central focus was to review research findings on the behavioral effects of reducing the addictiveness of cigarettes.
This manuscript reports the results of a review of the behavioral science literature, updated through April 2021, with special attention to both the potential benefits and unintended consequences of reducing nicotine in cigarettes.
Available evidence suggests that reducing nicotine content in cigarettes to very low levels could benefit public health in three primary ways, by 1) decreasing uptake of regular smoking, 2) decreasing the amount people smoke, and 3) increasing the likelihood of smoking cessation. Current evidence also suggests that reducing nicotine in cigarettes may produce similar benefits across many important subpopulations of people who smoke, including those with psychiatric comorbidities, those who use other substances, those with low socioeconomic status, young people, people who smoke infrequently and people who prefer menthol cigarettes. Cigarette nicotine reduction could also lead to some undesirable outcomes, such as experiencing withdrawal, product manipulation, an illicit market, and harm misperceptions; strategies that may mitigate each are discussed.
Overall, behavioral research suggests product standards that limit the nicotine content of combusted tobacco products could render cigarettes and similar products less addictive. The availability of legal, non-combusted products that effectively substitute for cigarettes and the dissemination of public health campaigns that clarify misperceptions about the relationship between nicotine, tobacco and disease may facilitate the extent to which a nicotine reduction policy reduces smoking.
2018 年 5 月,世界卫生组织烟草控制框架公约秘书处召开会议,讨论降低烟草产品成瘾性的可能性。会议的一个重点是审查关于降低香烟成瘾性的行为研究结果。
本报告是对行为科学文献的综述结果,更新截止日期为 2021 年 4 月,特别关注降低香烟中尼古丁含量的潜在益处和意外后果。
现有证据表明,将香烟中的尼古丁含量降低到非常低的水平,可以通过以下三种主要方式促进公共健康:1)减少常规吸烟的比例,2)减少人们吸烟的数量,3)提高戒烟的可能性。目前的证据还表明,降低香烟中的尼古丁含量可能会在许多重要的吸烟人群中产生类似的益处,包括那些有精神共病的人、使用其他物质的人、社会经济地位较低的人、年轻人、吸烟频率较低的人和喜欢薄荷醇香烟的人。降低香烟中的尼古丁含量也可能导致一些不良后果,如经历戒断、产品操纵、非法市场和对危害的误解;讨论了可能减轻每种后果的策略。
总的来说,行为研究表明,限制可燃烟草产品中尼古丁含量的产品标准可以降低香烟和类似产品的成瘾性。合法的、非可燃的替代品的出现,以及开展公众宣传活动以澄清对尼古丁、烟草和疾病之间关系的误解,可能会促进减少吸烟的尼古丁含量政策的实施程度。