Gudi Nachiket, Mathias Edlin Glane, Swain Ansuman, Gupta Vanshika, Raj Elstin Anbu, Pattanshetty Sanjay, Zodpey Sanjay, Brand Helmut
Department of Health Information, Prasanna School of Public Health, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Manipal, India.
School of Sport Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2024 Dec 23;27(1):3-11. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntae135.
Tobacco usage is an epidemic as statistics point towards smoking as the second leading cause of death. Populations experiencing humanitarian emergencies may experience a higher propensity for tobacco, alcohol, and other substance abuse disorders. This review aimed to map tobacco prevention and control interventions in humanitarian settings.
The search for this scoping review was conducted in six databases and supplemented with a gray literature search. Articles were screened at title-abstract and full-text by two pairs of authors, and data was abstracted by three individuals independently. An adapted diffusion of governance framework is used to discuss the findings.
A total of 26 articles were included from the searches conducted in the databases and gray literature. The interventions targeted all age groups. The documents retrieved from the gray literature search were classified as population-based interventions, as they were not restricted to a particular group of individuals. Interventions were delivered at various locations, using different methods and engaging multiple stakeholders. Interventions assessed were grouped into packaging, labeling, and other policy interventions (pricing and taxes).
There are few tobacco prevention and control interventions in the humanitarian context. The diffusion of governance perspective in implementing these interventions in humanitarian settings provides a cue for inter-sectoral cooperation among different stakeholders and disciplines beyond the health sector. Our review recommends exploring complementarity between the demand and supply-side interventions for tobacco control.
The scoping review has highlighted various tobacco prevention and control efforts in humanitarian settings. The interventions were delivered using various modes, and yet the burden of smoking is higher among the humanitarian population. Further research may use impact evaluation techniques to assess the impact of these interventions to facilitate the re-design of the implementation approach and policy priorities.
烟草使用是一种流行病,统计数据表明吸烟是第二大死因。经历人道主义紧急情况的人群可能更容易出现烟草、酒精和其他物质滥用障碍。本综述旨在梳理人道主义背景下的烟草预防和控制干预措施。
本次范围综述的检索在六个数据库中进行,并辅以灰色文献检索。文章由两对作者进行标题-摘要和全文筛选,数据由三人独立提取。采用一种经过调整的治理框架传播模型来讨论研究结果。
在数据库和灰色文献检索中总共纳入了26篇文章。这些干预措施针对所有年龄组。从灰色文献检索中获取的文献被归类为基于人群的干预措施,因为它们并不局限于特定的个体群体。干预措施在不同地点实施,采用不同方法,并涉及多个利益相关者。所评估的干预措施分为包装、标签及其他政策干预措施(定价和税收)。
在人道主义背景下,烟草预防和控制干预措施较少。从治理角度在人道主义环境中实施这些干预措施,为卫生部门以外不同利益相关者和学科之间的跨部门合作提供了思路。我们的综述建议探索烟草控制供需方干预措施之间的互补性。
范围综述突出了人道主义背景下的各种烟草预防和控制努力。干预措施通过多种方式实施,但人道主义人群中的吸烟负担仍然较高。进一步的研究可使用影响评估技术来评估这些干预措施的影响,以促进实施方法和政策重点的重新设计。