Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological review

Introduction Evidence on the association between tobacco outlet density (TOD) and smoking behaviour among youth is inconclusive, which may be due to differences in methodological quality. The aim of this systematic review was to examine to what extent the methodological quality of studies determined...

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Main Authors: Paulien AW Nuyts, Lisa EM Davies, Anton E Kunst, Mirte AG Kuipers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Publishing 2018-06-01
Series:Tobacco Prevention and Cessation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journalssystem.com/tpc/Unravelling-variation-in-the-evidence-for-the-association-between-tobacco-outlet,90330,0,2.html
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spelling doaj-f62bae5a45354154acfb24e1379d17f22020-11-25T00:45:42ZengEuropean PublishingTobacco Prevention and Cessation2459-30872018-06-014Supplement10.18332/tpc/9033090330Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological reviewPaulien AW Nuyts0Lisa EM Davies1Anton E Kunst2Mirte AG Kuipers3Department of Public Health, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, NetherlandsDepartment of Public Health, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, NetherlandsDepartment of Public Health, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, NetherlandsDepartment of Public Health, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, NetherlandsIntroduction Evidence on the association between tobacco outlet density (TOD) and smoking behaviour among youth is inconclusive, which may be due to differences in methodological quality. The aim of this systematic review was to examine to what extent the methodological quality of studies determined the association between TOD and smoking behaviour among young people, by 1) assessing potential sources of bias, and 2) identifying differences in methodological quality between studies that found positive, negative, and/or no significant associations. Methods MEDLINE, EMBASE and Google Scholar were systematically searched for studies on TOD and smoking behaviour among young people published between 1997 and 2017. The methodological quality of the included studies was evaluated independently by two reviewers using the NIH Study Quality Assessment Tool for observational studies and the Cochrane Collaboration Risk of Bias assessment. Results Nineteen studies were included in the review. The quality assessment identified five primary sources of bias: misclassification of exposure measurements, over- and under-adjustment for confounders, selection bias, and under-powered analyses. Taking these biases into account, the 12 studies with a positive association were unlikely to have overestimated the association, whereas the 16 studies that did not find significant associations were more likely to have underestimated the association. Although not of poor quality, three studies found negative associations. Conclusions Considering the quality of the evidence, higher TOD is likely to be associated with higher smoking rates. Future research should establish the causality of this association in order to identify whether removing tobacco outlets would lead to lower smoking rates. Funding This study is part of the SILNE-R project, which received funding from the European Commission (EC), Horizon2020 program, Call PHC6-2014, under Grant Agreement n°635056.http://www.journalssystem.com/tpc/Unravelling-variation-in-the-evidence-for-the-association-between-tobacco-outlet,90330,0,2.htmlyouth preventiontobacco
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paulien AW Nuyts
Lisa EM Davies
Anton E Kunst
Mirte AG Kuipers
spellingShingle Paulien AW Nuyts
Lisa EM Davies
Anton E Kunst
Mirte AG Kuipers
Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological review
Tobacco Prevention and Cessation
youth prevention
tobacco
author_facet Paulien AW Nuyts
Lisa EM Davies
Anton E Kunst
Mirte AG Kuipers
author_sort Paulien AW Nuyts
title Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological review
title_short Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological review
title_full Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological review
title_fullStr Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological review
title_full_unstemmed Unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: A systematic methodological review
title_sort unravelling variation in the evidence for the association between tobacco outlet density and smoking among young people: a systematic methodological review
publisher European Publishing
series Tobacco Prevention and Cessation
issn 2459-3087
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Introduction Evidence on the association between tobacco outlet density (TOD) and smoking behaviour among youth is inconclusive, which may be due to differences in methodological quality. The aim of this systematic review was to examine to what extent the methodological quality of studies determined the association between TOD and smoking behaviour among young people, by 1) assessing potential sources of bias, and 2) identifying differences in methodological quality between studies that found positive, negative, and/or no significant associations. Methods MEDLINE, EMBASE and Google Scholar were systematically searched for studies on TOD and smoking behaviour among young people published between 1997 and 2017. The methodological quality of the included studies was evaluated independently by two reviewers using the NIH Study Quality Assessment Tool for observational studies and the Cochrane Collaboration Risk of Bias assessment. Results Nineteen studies were included in the review. The quality assessment identified five primary sources of bias: misclassification of exposure measurements, over- and under-adjustment for confounders, selection bias, and under-powered analyses. Taking these biases into account, the 12 studies with a positive association were unlikely to have overestimated the association, whereas the 16 studies that did not find significant associations were more likely to have underestimated the association. Although not of poor quality, three studies found negative associations. Conclusions Considering the quality of the evidence, higher TOD is likely to be associated with higher smoking rates. Future research should establish the causality of this association in order to identify whether removing tobacco outlets would lead to lower smoking rates. Funding This study is part of the SILNE-R project, which received funding from the European Commission (EC), Horizon2020 program, Call PHC6-2014, under Grant Agreement n°635056.
topic youth prevention
tobacco
url http://www.journalssystem.com/tpc/Unravelling-variation-in-the-evidence-for-the-association-between-tobacco-outlet,90330,0,2.html
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