Title: The California Tobacco Control Program
1The California Tobacco Control Program
- Tonia Hagaman, MPH, Chief
- Local Programs and Advocacy Campaigns
- California Department of Public Health
- Tobacco Control Section
2California Tobacco Control Program Begins
- 1988 California voters pass Proposition 99.
Tobacco tax increases from 10 to 35 per
cigarette pack and earmarks 5 (20) of the
revenues for a tobacco control program.
3A Bit About California
- 36 million people
- Most of CAs geography is rural
- Population is extremely diverse, which creates
many challenges
4DHS/TCS Budget 1989-1990 to 2006-2007
Millions
5Tobacco Program Budget2006/2007
Evaluation/Surveillance
Non-profit Agency Grants
DHS Administration
School Programs
Local Health Departments
Media Campaign
6Goal Change Social Norm
Outcome prevention cessation
7Social Norm Change Cycle
For continued progress, the cycle must continue
to press forward.
Apathy
?
Awareness
Contentment
?
?
?
Concern
Expectation
?
?
Attitudinal Shift
?
Social Norm
?
?
Social Concern
Action/ Legislation
Stagnation in outcome results from not moving
through the cycle and not pressing for new public
health protections.
8Denormalization Strategy
Lasting change in youth behavior regarding
tobacco can only be secured by first changing the
adult world in which youth grow up.
9(No Transcript)
10How California Defines the Problem
11Problem Sex Sells
12Problem Target Marketing
Find Your Voice
13February 2007
14Problem Tobacco Industry Bar Night Sponsorship
15Problem Tobacco Company Sponsorship
16Problem Free Tobacco Sampling
17Problem 2006 Rite Aid Heart Disease
CampaignWhats wrong with this picture?
18Problem Unprotected Workers
American Indian Casinos
19Problem Drifting Smoke in Multi-Unit Housing
20Problem Tobacco Litter Pollutes
21Problem Fighting for the Beaches
22Problem Reduced Harm Products
23Problem Tobacco Sales to Kids
- Adults make decisions to.
- Enforce tobacco control laws
24Problem Retail Advertising
- Adults Make Decisions to.
- Promote tobacco use through ads
25Adults Make Decisions to.
- Raise taxes on tobacco products
26Problem Tobacco use in the movies
- Adults Make Decisions to..
- Glamorize model tobacco use in movies
27Adults Make Decisions to..
- Dedicate funding for tobacco control
28Adults Make Decisions to...
- Protect workers from secondhand smoke
29Four Effective Strategies
Outcomes
Strategies
Reduce Exposure to SHS and Tolerance to Exposure
Decrease Tobacco Consumption
Decrease Tobacco Use Prevalence
Counter Pro-Tobacco Influences
Decrease Youth Uptake of Tobacco
Reduce Availability to Tobacco from Retail
Social Sources
Provide Cessation Services
Decrease Exposure to SHS
30Social Norm Change Strategy
- Doesnt rule out educating individuals, but
emphasizes making changes in the larger physical
social environment - It creates lasting population changes
- As new people or businesses move into your
community, they inherit, adopt and conform to the
established norms about tobacco use
31A Powerful Equation
Media
Community Involvement
Social Norm Change
32California Tobacco Control Program Media Campaign
33Role of Media
- To be ahead of the of the wave (public opinion)
- To use the energy at the front of the wave to
pull public opinion forward
34Three Main Media Strategies
- Secondhand Smoke (SHS) Provides smokers a reason
to quit and facilitates SHS laws (protect loved
ones) - Counter the Tobacco Industry Motivates smokers
to quit as they understand TI manipulation and
nicotine addiction - Cessation Provides resources to quit
35Secondhand Smoke Strategy
36Rationale for Secondhand Smoke Strategy
- Secondhand Smoke
- Educate people about the hazards, and they will
take action to protect themselves - Cessation is an outcome - people smoke less
quit to protect their families - Gives non-smokers a voice
- Turns public apathy into action mobilizing
communities to enact policies to protect
non-smokers
37Cumulative Number of Cities with Smoke-Free
Provisions in Local Laws
286
133
82
35
18
1
5
38Economic Impact of Smoke-free Restaurants and Bars
39Bar Patron Approval of the Smoke-Free Bar Law,
1998 and 2002
Source California Bar Patrons Field Polls Mar
1998 and September 2002 Prepared by California
Department of Health Services, Tobacco Control
Section, Nov 2002
40Bar Establishment Ease of Compliance with the
Smoke-Free Bar Law
Fairly Easy
Easy
Very Easy
48.5
28.3
76.8
10.5
22.5
12.0
Fairly Difficult
Very Difficult
Difficult
Source California Bar Establishments Field
Polls, October 2002 Prepared by California
Department of Health Services, Tobacco Control
Section, Nov 2002
41Bar Owners/Employees Prefer Smoke-Free Environment
Source California Bar Establishments Field Polls
Mar 1998 and October 2002 Prepared by California
Department of Health Services, Tobacco Control
Section, Nov 2002
42Bar Revenues in California 1990-2002
Millions of Dollars
Smoke-free bar law
Smoke-free restaurant law
Source California Board of Equalization. Data
is from the Eating and drinking establishments -
all types of liquor category. Prepared by
California Department of Health Services, Tobacco
Control Section.
43Anti-Industry Strategy
44Rationale for Anti-Industry Strategy
- Countering Pro-Tobacco Influences
- Causes people to question industry motives and
rallies smokers non-smokers alike - Youth adults rebel against industry
manipulation - Motivates quitting as people become angry about
the manipulation - Holds the industry accountable for their
marketing practices which target vulnerable
populations
45The Role of Litigation
Tobacco Control Section Records Boxed and Ready
for Tobacco Industry Imaging
46Role of Litigation Government Lawsuits
- 1998 Master Settlement Agreement (MSA)
- Generated 25 billion/25 years for California
- Limits youth tobacco marketing
- Aggressive MSA enforcement
- 11.4 million settlement against RJR for MSA
violations (2004) - 5 million settlement against RJR for free
tobacco samples (2006)
47Cessation Strategy
48Rationale for Cessation Strategy
- Demonstrates empathy for smokers
- Acknowledges that quitting is hard work
- Provides assistance with quitting
Call 1-800-NO BUTTS
49Role of Cessation Services in Reducing Smoking
Prevalence
- To create a substantial public health benefit,
the intervention must create significant change
at the population level - Weaker interventions that create change with
large numbers of smokers can make a significant
impact - Californias program has relied on changing the
environment coupled with support for cessation
services
50Community-Based Efforts
51Rationale For Community Involvement
- Increases the likelihood that members of the
target group will come into contact with your
messages - Promoting messages through multiple channels is
effective at changing norms - Ties the program to the community since members
were involved in developing it
52Rationale For Community Involvement
- Brings together a variety of expertise, influence
and connections - Through involvement of the community and its
leaders, the community is mobilized
53CDPH Tobacco Control Program Infrastructure
Statewide Evaluation/Surveillance
Statewide Media Campaign
61 Health Department Projects
CommunityCoalitions
Capacity Building Network
Statewide Youth Advocacy Network
39 Community Non-profit Agency Projects
Statewide Training Technical Assistance Projects
Legal Technical Assistance Center
Policy Community Organizing Center
Materials Clearinghouse
Local Program Evaluation Center
Cessation Quitline
Secondhand Smoke Training
54 Overview Who We Fund
- 61 city and county health departments, a.k.a.
Local Lead Agencies (LLA) - Over 50 competitive grantees (CGs), including 39
local grantees - LLAs and CGs work on the four tobacco control
priority areas
55 Direct Service Providers
- California Smokers Helpline
- Toll-free quitline that provides intensive
cessation counseling in multiple languages - Self-help and referral services
- Over 25 quit rate
- Tobacco Education Clearinghouse
- Educational materials development and
distribution - Library and web site services
- Technical assistance to contracted agencies
56Integrated Approach to Addressing Disparities
- Multi-cultural and multi-lingual media
- Multi-cultural and multi-lingual quitline Asian,
English, Spanish, Hearing impaired - Extensive tobacco educational materials
clearinghouse - Surveillance English and Spanish
- Special population surveillance studies
- Priority population local project procurements
- Requirement for health depts. to assess cultural
competency assets and include an objective to
address cultural competency - Requirement for health dept. coalitions to
reflect population diversity - Statewide training technical assistance
57 Training and Technical
Assistance Providers
- Tobacco Control Evaluation Center
- TA regarding evaluating tobacco control programs
training - Technical Assistance Legal Center
- TA regarding drafting and passing tobacco control
policies high quality legal analyses training - California Clean Air Project
- TA regarding SHS issues, including
compliance/enforcement of existing laws new
policy issues (OTS) training
58 Training and Technical
Assistance Providers
- Center for Community Organizing
- TA regarding community mobilization and policy
passage - Youth Advocacy Network
- TA regarding youth and college-based advocacy
coordinate statewide youth coalition and advocacy
activities
59Successes of the California Tobacco Control
Program
60California adult smoking prevalence by region,
1990 to 2005
1990
1996
1999
2002
2005
61Smoking Prevalence Among California Adults
1984-2006
Change in definition of smoking
decrease of 41.4
Source Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
System (BRFSS) 1984-1992. BRFSS and California
Adult Tobacco Survey data is combined for
1993-2006. The data is weighted to the 2000
California population. Note change of smoking
definition in 1996 that included more occasional
smokers. Prepared by California Department of
Health Services, Tobacco Control Section, March
2007.
62US minus CA
California
6330-day Smoking Prevalence for California and U.S.
High School Students (9th-12th Grade), 2000-2006
Prevalence
Source The 2000 data is from the National Youth
Tobacco Survey collected by the American Legacy
Foundation, which used passive parental consent.
The 2002 and 2004 data is from the California
Student Tobacco Survey, which used active
parental consent. Prepared by California
Department of Health Services, Tobacco Control
Section, 2006.
64Lung and bronchus age-adjusted cancer incidence
rates, 1988-2003
EAPC -0.4
EAPC -1.4
Rates are per 100,000 and age-adjusted to the
2000 U.S. standard (19 age groups). The EAPC
is significantly different from zero
(plt0.05). Source Cancer Surveillance Section.
Prepared by California Department of Health
Services, Tobacco Control Section, 2006.
65Secondhand Smoke Strategy Works
Relation Between Policy and Cigarette Consumption
Cigarettes/Day
Source California Tobacco Survey 1999.
66Former Smokers/Smokers Who Agreed Smoke-Free
Workplace Law Made it Easier to Quit or Smoke Less
Source The 2004 Survey of California Adults on
Secondhand Smoke conducted by Field Research
Corporation. Prepared by California Department
of Health Services, Tobacco Control Section,
January 2005.
67Most Effective Interventions
- Increase the price of tobacco products
- Secondhand smoke policies
- Counter the tobacco industry
68Increase the Price of Tobacco
- A 2.60 per pack cigarette tax in California
would - Reduce the number of cigarettes consumed by 312
million packs - 502,108 smokers would quit because of the tax
increase - Adult smoking would decline by 13.2 from 14 to
12.2 - 150,000 youth would either quit or not start
- High school smoking would decline by 42.8 from
13.2 to 7.6 - Middle school smoking would decline by 42.8 from
3.9 to 2.2.
69Increase the Price of Tobacco
- A 2.60 per pack cigarette tax in California
would - Prevent 120,000 deaths due to smoking among adult
smokers who quit - Prevent 180,000 deaths among youth under age 17
- Save 16.5 billion in health care costs
- A simulation model estimates about 60 of the
decline in smoking in California is attributable
to price increases
70Secondhand Smoke (SHS)
- Negative attitudes about SHS are a strong
predictor of quitting - over 6 times less likely to smoke
- more than 2 times more likely to have made a
recent quit attempt - over 2 times more likely to have intentions to
quit smoking in the next 6 months - A simulation model estimates about 10 of decline
in smoking in California due to the state clean
indoor air law, but the impact may be
underestimated because so many local laws were in
effect prior to the state law
71Countering Pro-tobacco Influences
- Californians with highly negative attitudes about
the tobacco industry are - 22 less likely to smoke
- Among smokers, 65 are more likely to have
intentions to quit in the next six months in
comparison to those with moderate or low negative
attitudes about the tobacco industry - A simulation model estimates that 25 of
reduction in smoking was due to the media
campaign
72Conclusions
- A comprehensive program is most effective
- Media and local programs must be coordinated and
well funded - If you want kids to not smoke, you have to get
the adults to change their behavior - Anti-industry and secondhand smoke strategies are
effective with adults and youth
73Conclusions
- Provide strong leadership, but allow for Program
flexibility - Empower the communities to advocate for local
change - Be culturally sensitive and use the power of the
communities - Oversight and accountability are the key to
sustainability of the Program
74Continuing Challenges of the California Tobacco
Control Program
75Not everyone has benefited equally
- Smoking prevalence is high among
- Low SES
- African-Americans
- Korean men
- American Indians
- LGBT
- Active duty military
- Rural areas
- Men overall
- 18-29 year olds
76Low SES Prevalence in CA, 1990-2005
7718-24 Year Old Prevalence, 2001-2005
Percent
78New Program Priorities
Secondhand Smoke in American Indian Casinos
Smoke-free Multi-Unit Housing
Smoke-Free Outdoor Areas
79Smoke-free Cars
- Infraction to smoke a pipe, cigar or cigarette in
a motor vehicle while a minor (lt 18) is present - Law enforcement may not stop a vehicle for the
sole purpose of determining a smoking violation - Each infraction to result in a minimum fine of
100 - To take effect January 1, 2008
80Other State Laws
- Access to Tobacco
- Retail Licensing and Enforcement
- Self Service Display Law
- Vending Machines
- Prisons
81Innovative Ideas
- Smoke-free
- Tot Lots and playgrounds
- Cars
- Outdoor dining
- Multi-unit housing
82Think BIG
- Big Hairy Audacious Goals
- Have an impossible vision of the future
- Decide what the practical steps are that start
you in the direction of your vision - KEEP GOING!!!
83California Tobacco Control Program Contacts
- Community Programs Tonia Hagaman
- Tonia.Hagaman_at_cdph.ca.gov
- Media Campaign Colleen Stevens
- Colleen.Stevens_at_cdph.ca.gov
- Policy Greg Oliva
- Greg.Oliva_at_cdph.ca.gov
- Evaluation Surveillance David Cowling
- David.Cowling_at_cdph.ca.gov