Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis

Background Emerging tobacco products including electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) present an opportunity and a challenge with respect to charting a pathway to the demise of tobacco use. As of June 2017, 35 countries ban the retail sale of ENDS. The current study sought to understand the ass...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alex Liber, Ryan Kennedy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Publishing 2018-03-01
Series:Tobacco Induced Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Seeking-patterns-of-countries-banning-sales-of-electronic-nicotine-delivery-systems,84006,0,2.html
id doaj-4ccbfc7135ef4d11a14a33659952d401
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4ccbfc7135ef4d11a14a33659952d4012020-11-24T23:56:42ZengEuropean PublishingTobacco Induced Diseases1617-96252018-03-0116110.18332/tid/8400684006Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysisAlex Liber0Ryan Kennedy1University of Michigan, Health Management and Policy, United States of AmericaJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Health, Behavior & Society, United States of AmericaBackground Emerging tobacco products including electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) present an opportunity and a challenge with respect to charting a pathway to the demise of tobacco use. As of June 2017, 35 countries ban the retail sale of ENDS. The current study sought to understand the associations between countries banning sales of ENDS and the country's stage of the tobacco epidemic in the Lopez (1994) model. Methods Data on the policy choices of 186 countries to ban retail sales of ENDS was combined with daily cigarette smoking prevalence and death figures from tobacco smoking by country, sex, and year. Countries in 2015, were classified as being in stages 1 to 4 of the Lopez epidemic model, according to whether tobacco smoking prevalence and attributable deaths were rising or falling over the prior decade. Logistic regression analysis on the final cross-sectional dataset was performed to test the hypothesis that countries in the earlier stages of the tobacco epidemic and countries with relatively smaller populations of female smokers were more likely to ban the sale of ENDS. Results 18.8% of countries in the total sample banned the retail sale of ENDS. Countries in stages 1, 2, and 3 of the epidemic had odds ratios of 1.024, 1.106, and 0.633 relative to countries in the final stage of the epidemic of adopting a ban on retail sales of ENDS. Although statistically insignificant (all p>0.05), the proportions suggest that those jurisdictions at the height of the epidemic (stage 3) are slightly less likely to ban e-cigarettes. Stage Not Banned Banned 1 18 5 2 10 3 3 64 11 4 59 16 [Country ENDS Sale Ban by Stage of Tobacco Epidemic] Conclusions Countries in early stages of the tobacco epidemic may be less likely to ban e-cigarettes, because there may be little to no presence of the products. Countries in the latter stages of the tobacco epidemic may be more able to regulate e-cigarettes, rather than ban them.http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Seeking-patterns-of-countries-banning-sales-of-electronic-nicotine-delivery-systems,84006,0,2.htmlWCTOH
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alex Liber
Ryan Kennedy
spellingShingle Alex Liber
Ryan Kennedy
Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis
Tobacco Induced Diseases
WCTOH
author_facet Alex Liber
Ryan Kennedy
author_sort Alex Liber
title Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis
title_short Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis
title_full Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis
title_fullStr Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis
title_full_unstemmed Seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis
title_sort seeking patterns of countries banning sales of electronic nicotine delivery systems at different stages of the tobacco epidemic: an exploratory analysis
publisher European Publishing
series Tobacco Induced Diseases
issn 1617-9625
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Background Emerging tobacco products including electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) present an opportunity and a challenge with respect to charting a pathway to the demise of tobacco use. As of June 2017, 35 countries ban the retail sale of ENDS. The current study sought to understand the associations between countries banning sales of ENDS and the country's stage of the tobacco epidemic in the Lopez (1994) model. Methods Data on the policy choices of 186 countries to ban retail sales of ENDS was combined with daily cigarette smoking prevalence and death figures from tobacco smoking by country, sex, and year. Countries in 2015, were classified as being in stages 1 to 4 of the Lopez epidemic model, according to whether tobacco smoking prevalence and attributable deaths were rising or falling over the prior decade. Logistic regression analysis on the final cross-sectional dataset was performed to test the hypothesis that countries in the earlier stages of the tobacco epidemic and countries with relatively smaller populations of female smokers were more likely to ban the sale of ENDS. Results 18.8% of countries in the total sample banned the retail sale of ENDS. Countries in stages 1, 2, and 3 of the epidemic had odds ratios of 1.024, 1.106, and 0.633 relative to countries in the final stage of the epidemic of adopting a ban on retail sales of ENDS. Although statistically insignificant (all p>0.05), the proportions suggest that those jurisdictions at the height of the epidemic (stage 3) are slightly less likely to ban e-cigarettes. Stage Not Banned Banned 1 18 5 2 10 3 3 64 11 4 59 16 [Country ENDS Sale Ban by Stage of Tobacco Epidemic] Conclusions Countries in early stages of the tobacco epidemic may be less likely to ban e-cigarettes, because there may be little to no presence of the products. Countries in the latter stages of the tobacco epidemic may be more able to regulate e-cigarettes, rather than ban them.
topic WCTOH
url http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Seeking-patterns-of-countries-banning-sales-of-electronic-nicotine-delivery-systems,84006,0,2.html
work_keys_str_mv AT alexliber seekingpatternsofcountriesbanningsalesofelectronicnicotinedeliverysystemsatdifferentstagesofthetobaccoepidemicanexploratoryanalysis
AT ryankennedy seekingpatternsofcountriesbanningsalesofelectronicnicotinedeliverysystemsatdifferentstagesofthetobaccoepidemicanexploratoryanalysis
_version_ 1725456965605261312