Impact Data - Massachusetts Tobacco Control Programme
This report is apart of an annual, ongoing evaluation of the Massachusetts Tobacco Control Programme (MTCP) activities and the progress made towards the programme goals.
The total 1990-2000 sample included 1,123,858 respondents, of whom 30,289 (2.9%) were in Massachusetts and 1,093,569 (97.1%) in 41 comparison states. As in the previous analysis, the study excluded data from California because of its comprehensive tobacco control program similar to that in Massachusetts, allowing for assessment of the effects of the MTCP (7 other states were excluded because of reporting gaps). Respondents in the 41 comparison states represent a population that was not subject to comprehensive tobacco control programming for most of the study period.
As in previous reports, this analysis tests the main null hypothesis that there was no difference in the time trends of current smoking prevalence between Massachusetts and the 41 comparison states, controlling for demographic factors. This test was controlled for variances in sex, age, race, and education level using multiple logistic regression models.
Only 16% smoked more than a pack a day in 2002, versus 26% in 1993. Among youth, 26% of Massachusetts high school students smoked within the month prior to the survey (2001 Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS)), a substantial and statistically significant improvement from the 36% smoking rate reported in 1995, and the 30% rate found for 1999.
Fewer pregnant women are smoking, down from 17% in 1993 to 10% in 2000. This 39% decline is much steeper than the national decline of 24% during the same period.
Public support for smoking bans in public continues to grow. By 2001-2002, 60% or more of Massachusetts residents supported complete smoking bans in shopping malls, public buildings, indoor sporting events, and restaurants. All of these represent significant increases since 1995 when levels were in the mid 30% range.
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