Menthol Cigarette Use in Substance Use Disorder Treatment Before and After Implementation of a Count
Monday, December 21, 2020
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Joseph
R Guydish, Elana R Straus, Thao Le, Noah Gubner, Kevin L Delucchi
Menthol Cigarette Use in
Substance Use Disorder Treatment Before and After Implementation of a
County-Wide Flavoured Tobacco Ban.
Tobacco Control, 10 Nov 2020, DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2020-056000 PMID:
33177211
Introduction.
This study examined the impact of a San Francisco City and County ban on all
flavoured tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes, among clients in
residential substance use disorder (SUD) treatment.
Methods.
We conducted cross-sectional surveys of clients at two residential SUD
programmes before the County began enforcing the ban (n=160) and twice after
enforcement began (n=102, n=120). The samples were compared on demographic
characteristics, smoking status, smoking behaviours and the proportion
reporting menthol as their usual cigarette. Menthol smokers were asked whether
they smoked only menthol cigarettes, mostly menthol, both menthol and
non-menthol or mostly non-menthol. Post-ban samples were asked about awareness
of the ban and access to menthol cigarettes.
Results.
In multivariate analyses, we found no evidence that the ban was associated with
decreased number of cigarettes per day or increased readiness to quit among
current smokers. However, odds were lower post-ban for reporting menthol as the
usual cigarette (OR=0.80, 95% CI 0.72 to 0.90), and for smoking only menthol
cigarettes (OR=0.19, 95% CI 0.18 to 0.19). Perhaps most importantly, and with
the ability to influence all other findings, 50% of self-identified menthol
smokers reported purchasing menthol cigarettes in San Francisco nearly 1 year
after the ban was implemented.
Conclusion.
In subgroups where smoking has remained elevated, like those receiving SUD
treatment, local menthol bans may have only modest impacts on smoking
behaviour. Broader regional, state or national bans, that effectively restrict
access to menthol products, may be needed to show stronger effects on smoking
behaviour.
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