Will costlier cigarette make smokers kick butt? Price of $1 more may: Study

When cigarette prices increase $1, smokers show 35% reduction in average number they smoked per day

ANI  |  Washington DC 

Cigarette, Tobacco, BAT
Cigarettes. Photo: Reuters

Turns out, smokers are 20 percent more likely to quit if cost a dollar more.

The study used 10 years of neighbourhood-level price data to determine how it affected nearby smokers, focusing on those who skewed older.

Lead author Stephanie Mayne said that older adult smokers have been for a long time and tend to have lower rates of cessation compared to younger populations, suggesting a deeply entrenched behaviour that is difficult to change.

She noted that the finding that increases in prices were associated with quitting in the older population suggests that taxes may be a particularly effective lever for behaviour change.

Taking a look at the local relationship between habits and prices is an understudied but important area to look at, according to the senior author Amy Auchincloss.

The cohort Mayne and Auchincloss looked at included smokers ranging in age from 44 to 84 and stretched across six different places, including the Bronx, Chicago, and the county containing Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Data were taken from the study population between 2002 and 2012 as a part of the Multi-Ethnic Study of Artherosclerosis (MESA).

In addition to finding that current smokers were 20 percent more likely to quit when pack prices went up by a dollar, Mayne and Auchincloss' team showed that there was a 3 percent overall reduction in risk.

However, when the data was narrowed to heavy smokers (defined as more than half a pack a day), there was a 7 percent reduction in risk. When prices increased by a dollar, heavy smokers also showed a 35 percent reduction in the average number of they smoked per day, compared to 19 percent less in the overall population.

"Since heavy smokers smoke more per day initially, they may feel the impact of a price increase to a greater degree and be more likely to cut back on the number of they smoke on a daily basis," Mayne said.

While the data focused on a population older than 44, Mayne believes the price effect may be "similar or possibly stronger in a younger population."

Something she found, though, was that bans in bars and restaurants did not appear to have any effect on behaviour in the study population. Although more research is likely necessary to see why that is and whether it's true, one possible explanation is that the economic pressures of a price increase provide a stronger incentive to quit than placing limits on in public places.

The study is published in Epidemiology.

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