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Nicotine & Tobacco Research Advance Access published online on January 27, 2009

Nicotine & Tobacco Research, doi:10.1093/ntr/ntn002
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

The impact of tobacco promotion at the point of sale: A systematic review

Janine Paynter and Richard Edwards

Janine Paynter, Ph.D., Action on Smoking and Health New Zealand, Auckland, New Zealand
Richard Edwards, M.D., Director of Health Promotion and Policy Research Unit, Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand

Corresponding Author: Janine Paynter, Action on Smoking and Health New Zealand, Box 99 126, Newmarket, Auckland 1149, New Zealand. Telephone: +64 9 520 3074. Fax: +64 9 520 4891. E-mail: jpaynter{at}ash.org.nz


   Abstract

Introduction: Tobacco promotion increases the likelihood that adolescents will start smoking. Much of the tobacco industry's promotional budget is spent on point of sale (PoS) promotion in many jurisdictions. Consequently, tobacco is an eye-catching feature at the PoS in many places.

Methods: We reviewed the evidence that PoS tobacco promotion influences key smoking-related behaviors and beliefs, increases susceptibility to smoking in youth, undermines smokers’ quit attempts, and promotes relapse among ex-smokers.

Results: We found 12 peer-reviewed studies, 10 of which were focused on children. Seven of 8 observational studies found statistically significant associations between exposure to tobacco promotion at the PoS and smoking initiation or susceptibility to smoking. Two experimental studies of children found statistically significant associations between exposure to PoS tobacco promotions and beliefs about ease of getting tobacco and smoking prevalence among their peers. An experimental study with adults found that a picture of collected tobacco pack elicited cravings for cigarettes among smokers. A cross-sectional study found that 25% of adult smokers reported impulse purchasing and a third of recent ex-smokers reported urges to start smoking after seeing tobacco displayed.

Discussion: More prospective studies are needed to clarify the temporal relationship between exposure to PoS tobacco and outcome. However, given the addictiveness of tobacco, the severity of the health hazards posed by smoking, the evidence that tobacco promotion encourages children to start smoking, and the consistency of the evidence that PoS promotion influences children's smoking, we believe that ample justification exists for banning PoS advertising and displays of smoked tobacco products.

Received: December 5, 2007; Accepted: August 3, 2008
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