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The Tobacco Control Scale: a new scale to measure country activity
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  1. L Joossens1,
  2. M Raw2
  1. 1Tobacco Control Manager, Belgian Foundation Against Cancer; Advocacy Officer, Association of the European Cancer Leagues, Brussels, Belgium
  2. 2Freelance consultant; honorary senior lecturer in public health science, Guy’s, King’s and St Thomas’ Medical School, University of London, UK; visiting professor, Sao Paulo Medical School, Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
  1. Correspondence to:
 Luk Joossens
 Belgian Foundation Against Cancer; Association of the European Cancer Leagues, 479 Chaussee de Louvain, Brussels B-1030, Belgium; joossens{at}globalink.org

Abstract

Objectives: To quantify the implementation of tobacco control policies at country level using a new Tobacco Control Scale and to report initial results using the scale.

Method: A questionnaire sent to correspondents in 30 European countries, using a scoring system designed with the help of a panel of international tobacco control experts.

Results: The 30 countries are ranked by their total score on the scale out of a maximum possible score of 100. Only four countries (Ireland, United Kingdom, Norway, Iceland) scored 70 or more, with an eight point gap (most differences in scores are small) to the fifth country, Malta, on 62. Only 13 countries scored above 50, 11 of them from the European Union (EU), and the second largest points gap occurs between Denmark on 45 and Portugal on 39, splitting the table into three groups: 70 and above, 45 to 62, 39 and below. Ireland had the highest overall score, 74 out of 100, and Luxembourg was bottom with 26 points. However even Ireland, much praised for their ban on smoking in public places, did not increase tobacco taxes in 2005, for the first time since 1995.

Conclusions: Although the Tobacco Control Scale has limitations, this is the first time such a scale has been developed and applied to so many countries. We hope it will be useful in encouraging countries to strengthen currently weak areas of their tobacco control policy.

  • CDC, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • ENSP, European Network for Smoking Prevention
  • FCTC, Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
  • GDP, gross domestic product
  • PPS, purchasing power standards
  • TCS, Tobacco Control Scale
  • tobacco Control Scale
  • measurement
  • tobacco control policy

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There is evidence that comprehensive tobacco control programmes reduce smoking prevalence.1 However, there have been relatively few attempts so far to measure the implementation of tobacco control policies systematically at country level. This paper has two main aims: to quantify the implementation of tobacco control policies at country level using the new Tobacco Control Scale (TCS); to report initial results using the scale. The scale is based on six policies which, according to the evidence, should be prioritised in comprehensive tobacco control programmes. They are described by the World Bank1 and listed below. We describe how a questionnaire was designed to quantify the implementation of these interventions at country level, and how a scoring system was designed to create the scale. Finally we present initial results, showing countries ranked by their TCS score, and discuss the merits and limitations of the scale.

The World Bank list of effective tobacco control interventions

The June 2003 World Bank fact sheet, Tobacco control at a glance1 described six cost effective tobacco control interventions:

  • price increases through higher taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco products

  • bans/restrictions on smoking in public and work places

  • better consumer information, including public information campaigns, media coverage, and publicising research findings

  • comprehensive bans on the advertising and promotion of all tobacco products, logos and brand names

  • large, direct health warning labels on cigarette boxes and other tobacco products

  • treatment to help dependent smokers stop, including increased access to medications.

The evidence suggests that the best results are achieved when a comprehensive set of measures are implemented together.2,3 We briefly review these six interventions here.

Price increases through higher taxes on tobacco products

According to the World Bank, price increases are the most effective and cost effective tobacco control measure, especially for young people and others on low incomes, who are highly price responsive. A price rise of 10% decreases consumption by about 4% in high-income countries.4 The impact of price can be illustrated by what happened in France and the Netherlands.

During 2003 the price of the leading brand in France, Marlboro—with about 30% market share—increased by 31% while cigarette sales fell 13.5%. European cigarette tax policy is based on the price of the most popular price category in each country. In France, Marlboro is the most popular price category and thus is a good indicator of tax and price policy for cigarettes in France. Surveys conducted in November/December 1999 and 2003 showed that the proportion of smokers in France decreased from 35% to 30%, a fall of almost two million smokers. Furthermore in 2003 more smokers said they wanted to stop (66% v 58% in 1999) and price became the main reason they wanted to stop smoking (fourth place in 1999).5 In the Netherlands in February 2004, the price of a pack of Marlboro increased by just over 18%. During the year 2004 cigarette sales decreased by 12.8% and the number of smokers fell from 3 950 000 in 2003 to 3 690 000 in 2004, almost 7% fewer.6

Bans/restrictions on smoking in public and work places

The most extensive clean indoor air laws prohibit smoking in work places, on public transport, and in other public places, including restaurants and bars. Smoke-free workplaces not only protect non-smokers, they also create an environment that encourages smokers to cut down or stop. A review of 26 studies of the effect of smoke-free workplaces concluded that totally smoke-free workplaces are associated with reduction in prevalence of about 4%.7 People in work places that changed to—or maintained—smoke-free policies between 1993 and 2001 were almost twice as likely to stop smoking than people whose work places did not do so.8

In Europe, bans on smoking in the workplace (including bars and restaurants) have been introduced in Ireland (March 2004), Norway (June 2004), Italy (January 2005), Malta (April 2005), Sweden (June 2005), and Scotland (March 2006). Figures released by the Office of the Revenue Commissioners show a 15% fall in cigarette sales during 2004 in Ireland. They said: “this shortfall reflected changes in smoking patterns, which were affected by, amongst other things, the introduction of the smoke free workplace legislation”.9 The Irish cigarette smoking prevalence data bear this out, falling from 25.5% in March 2004 to 23.6% in August 2005.10 Italy also saw a decline: 28.3 million kg of cigarettes were sold in January–April 2005, compared with 31.1 million kg in the same period in 2004, a 9% reduction.11

Better consumer information, spending on public information campaigns

Our questionnaire measures national government spending on tobacco control, including spending on mass communication campaigns, treatment, and other tobacco control activities. Experience from the USA and Australia12 shows that increases in funding for tobacco control programmes reduce tobacco use. In the USA several states have invested in large-scale comprehensive, tobacco control programmes, including components such as media campaigns, school based programmes, treatment including telephone quit lines, and enforcement of smoking restrictions. The US data show a consistent pattern relating tobacco control expenditure to cigarette sales,13 with the effectiveness of mass media campaigns depending on their scale and duration. Expenditures have to be high enough to reach smokers sufficiently often and for long enough. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated that states need to spend between $1 and $3 per capita per year over at least three years to be effective.14

Comprehensive bans on the advertising and promotion of all tobacco products

Empirical evidence shows that a fully comprehensive advertising ban covering all media and all forms of direct and indirect advertising reduces tobacco consumption. A study of 22 high-income countries based on data from 1970 to 1992 concluded that comprehensive bans on cigarette advertising and promotion can reduce smoking, but that partial bans have little or no effect. If the most comprehensive restrictions were in place, the study concluded, tobacco consumption would fall by more than 6% in high income countries.15

Large, direct health warnings on tobacco product packaging

Evidence from Canada, Brazil, Netherlands and Australia shows that their recently introduced, large warnings discourage smoking and increase awareness of the harmful effects of smoking. Tobacco product warning labels are effective in informing smokers of the hazards of smoking, encouraging them to stop, and discouraging non-smokers from starting.16,17

Treatment to help dependent smokers stop

Most smokers want to stop but many need help to do so because of their dependence. In the UK, for example, about 70% of smokers each year say they would like to stop but only a third make an attempt, and only 2–3% succeed in stopping for at least one year.18 One major reason for such a low cessation rate is the addictiveness of nicotine. Many smokers need help to stop. However, effective treatments exist, in the form of behavioural support (including telephone help lines) and medications,19,20 and need to be made more widely available to smokers. Although their impact on prevalence is low they are important because they help heavier, more dependent smokers, who have the most difficulty stopping and who place a heavier burden on health care services. In England such treatment services are now nationally available to all smokers through the National Health Service, free at the point of use (that is, paid out of general taxation).21

METHODS

In 2004 the European Network for Smoking Prevention (ENSP), with financial support from the European Commission, provided a grant to one of the authors (LJ) to measure tobacco control activity at country level in Europe.22 A questionnaire was drafted then finalised with feedback from a panel of experts (table 1). In 2004 the questionnaire was sent to the ENSP correspondents in 28 countries who had agreed to fill in their country data. They were nominated by ENSP because they were the official country representatives to ENSP, members of their national coalition and thus knowledgeable about tobacco control (table 2). The questionnaire was sent to the 25 countries of the European Union (EU) plus Iceland, Norway and Switzerland (table 3).

Table 1

 The expert panel

Table 2

 National correspondents who filled in the Tobacco Control Scale questionnaire

Table 3

 The Tobacco Control Scale

Although the original intention of the project was simply to describe current tobacco control policies in Europe, it seemed worthwhile trying to quantify these policies, in order to compare countries more systematically. However, while we have evidence telling us broadly which tobacco control measures are effective, it is not easy to decide what weight should be given to each policy in a scale. This might be decided by the size of the effect of a policy measure, but relatively little rigorous research on the effectiveness of tobacco control policy exists, and such research that does exist is not precise enough to permit easy comparisons between countries. Therefore, in order to score the questionnaire and create the scale we had to assign scores to each tobacco control policy. To do this ENSP convened a panel of experts to agree the allocation of points to the scale. The panel exchanged emails from January to April 2004 and some of them met during an ENSP meeting in Krakow in May 2004. The panel included a leading American tobacco control economist, who was the World Bank representative to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations in Geneva, and tobacco control experts from different regions in Europe. On average the participants had more than 20 years experience in tobacco control. They contributed mostly to the weighting of price, smoke-free policies and advertising, mainly by email. None refused to join the project.

In summer 2005 the questionnaire survey was repeated with 30 European countries: the previous 28 plus two accession countries, Bulgaria and Romania. Data were collected using the 2004 questionnaire, but stricter definitions were applied in the scale to smoke-free places and smoking treatment systems.

The scale

The questionnaire and raw data are available on the Tobacco Control website—http://www.tobaccocontrol.com/supplemental. The Tobacco Control Scale (TCS), showing the points allocated to each policy, with a maximum potential score of 100, is shown in table 3. The right column/blue rows show the maximum points that can be scored for each policy. The questionnaire asked about legislation in force on the 1 July 2005, price data on 1 January 2005, and the 2004 tobacco control budget. Thus any legislation, price increases or funding introduced after those dates, as has happened or will happen for example in Spain, Scotland, Estonia, Belgium and England, are not included.

The following data sources (apart from the questionnaire) were used to score the scale:

  • the price of a pack of Marlboro (20 pieces) on 1 January 2005 was based on a Citigroup Smith Barney report23

  • the price of a pack of 20 cigarettes in the most popular price category on 1 January 2005 was based on the 2005 European Commission report “Excise duty tables”24

  • Gross domestic product (GDP) expressed in purchasing power standards (PPS) per capita and GDP in 2004, and country population data on 1 January 2004 were collected from the statistical office of the European Union25

  • information on legislation obtained from the correspondents via the questionnaire was discussed and verified at the WHO tobacco legislation database during a visit to the European regional office in July 2005; provisional scores were sent in July 2005 to the 30 country correspondents for comment.

The most common problem in assigning points remained the subjectivity involved in assessing enforcement/implementation. For example, there is room for interpretation of the extent to which a law is enforced or what for a treatment system constitutes “selected areas” or “the whole country”. We relied on the judgement of our correspondents, familiar with the situation in their country. Although we think the most accurate and reliable data are likely to come from experienced tobacco control professionals in their own country, we acknowledge that this scale depends critically on their judgement, and that in principle it would be worthwhile developing more sophisticated measures of implementation (see Discussion).

RESULTS

The results are shown in table 4. Countries are ranked by score, with the maximum possible score for each policy shown in brackets at the top. Only four countries score 70 or more (Ireland, UK, Norway, Iceland) with an eight point gap (differences in scores are mostly very small) to the fifth country, Malta, on 62. Only 13 countries score above 50, 11 of them from the EU, and the second largest gap occurs between Denmark on 45 and Portugal on 39, splitting the table into three groups: 70 and above, 45 to 62, 39 and below.

Table 4

 European countries ranked by total Tobacco Control Scale score

DISCUSSION

Will this scale be useful?

The purpose of this new scale is to introduce a new level of systematisation into scoring tobacco control at country level. This has never been done in so many countries and we hope the scale will be used even more widely, encouraging comparisons between countries and thus motivation to strengthen weak polices. We hope countries will not use it to boast of their success or rest on their laurels. All countries had low scores in some policy areas.

Norway and Iceland, for example, have low scores for treatment, while the UK and Lithuania have the lowest score on public place smoking bans, although the new English law, due to be implemented in 2007, will change this. Ireland increased its total score substantially as a result of its smoke-free legislation, for which, along with New York City, it gained considerable publicity. Ireland has been an inspiring example to many, and yet has a low score for campaign spending, and did not increase tobacco taxes in 2005, the first time since 1995.

Current limitations of the scale

Levy, Chaloupka and Gitchell described the effects of tobacco control policies on smoking rates and developed a tobacco control scorecard. They argued that large price increases through taxation and comprehensive clean air laws appear were most successful in reducing smoking rates, with each having the potential to reduce smoking prevalence by 10% or more. They also argue that media campaigns are effective when implemented with other polices, and they present evidence that all six of the policies in the World Bank paper are effective.3 Our expert panel agreed that prices and smoke-free places should receive the most points. However, they found it more difficult to decide the points allocation for advertising bans and for bans in specific media, and we have already acknowledged the difficulty of objectively measuring enforcement of some policies.

We were also unable to quantify some components of tobacco control policy which we believe are extremely important for public health and which, ideally, should be included in the scale:

  • spending on research to inform and underpin tobacco control policy

  • media coverage of tobacco control issues, which to a large extent reflects the skill and energy of tobacco control advocates and organisations

  • anti-smuggling measures.

Tobacco control research in Europe is extremely fragmented26 and severely underfunded, and we were unable to obtain reliable data on research and research spending at country level. The lack of rigour of much research on the effectiveness of tobacco control policies is surprising in view of smoking’s huge impact on health and healthcare spending, and the enormous public health impact of reducing tobacco use.27 Information on media coverage has proved too difficult to collect in 30 countries with more than 20 languages and would itself require a sizeable research project. Finally, with the exception of the UK,28 most countries do not have formal anti-smuggling strategies. Even if they did they would be difficult to evaluate as they are generally confidential. Success in the fight against smuggling is possible but usually happens as a result of coordinated, international actions.29

Scoring systems have been developed by others. Gilpin and colleagues developed an index for US state tobacco control outcomes based on cigarette prices and workplace and home smoking bans.30 Chriqui and colleagues31 applied a rating system to state indoor air laws in the USA, and the American Lung Association measures tobacco control activities at state level based on spending, smoke-free air laws, cigarette excise tax and youth access laws.32 However, these systems compare tobacco control policies within the same legal system, so measurement of enforcement, and comparisons, are easier. As far as we know the TCS is the first scale to be developed for use in so many countries. We hope it will be used and tested in many more.

What this paper adds

There are published studies describing scoring systems for tobacco control programmes but none has developed a systematic scoring system that can be used in many different countries with different languages, legal systems, etc. The Tobacco Control Scale uses a systematic scoring system that permits comparison in 30 European countries, and this study presents preliminary results using the new scale.

As we have indicated, we think it will be necessary to add policies to the scale, especially policies to reduce the harmfulness of tobacco products. At the moment regulation of nicotine and tobacco products is not based on rational or public health grounds, so as better regulation develops in some countries, the tobacco control scale should reflect it, especially in view of its enormous potential impact on public health. There is already vigorous discussion in the tobacco control field of the role smokeless tobacco in Sweden (snus) has played in the decline in smoking prevalence.33–36

The need for more funding on tobacco control and research

In the EU, only the UK spent more than €2 per capita per year on tobacco control. The 2004 ASPECT report recommended that EU members immediately increase per capita spending by €1–3. The best system is illustrated by Iceland, where the law obliges the government to spend at least 0.9% of total consumer spending on tobacco, on tobacco control: per capita spending is €2.27 per annum.37 However, tobacco control spending by the tobacco industry appears to be extremely bad for tobacco control and tobacco control budgets. Tobacco control funding by the German government was only €0.01 per capita in 2004—an incredible 1 cent. Spending appears to be low because the tobacco industry provides funding, as the result of a five year €11.8 million contract between the German Ministry of Health and the industry.38 Belgium has a similar problem. The Rodin Foundation is a non-profit organisation founded in 2000, partly at the initiative of the finance minister, funded by the tobacco industry, with a budget of €1 850 000 per year for six years.39

Finally, we acknowledge that this scale is work in progress. We would like to examine how the scale relates to smoking prevalence, and develop better measures of implementation. However, this will require standardised survey data based on large, representative samples, and accurate estimates of cross border shopping and illegal tobacco trade in the 30 countries. At the moment different countries use different prevalence measures, making it extremely difficult to compare the impact of policies between countries. Such research will cost money, but in the EU spending on research and evaluation is extremely low generally. The 2004 EU funded ASPECT report concluded: “A strong science base for tobacco control policy and interventions is … essential to improve societal understanding of the effects of tobacco on health and to best direct resources towards its control”.26

Acknowledgments

This project received financial support from the European Commission’s EU Public Health Programme 2003–2008 through the EC-ENSP grant agreement 2004323. Neither the European Network on Smoking Prevention nor the European Commission nor any person acting in their name can be held responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained in this document. We warmly thank the panel of experts and ENSP correspondents for their crucial contribution to the project and Michael Forrest (ENSP) for administrative support, including sending out the questionnaires to the ENSP correspondents. Thanks finally to David Sweanor, who commented on an earlier version of this paper, and Robert West for advice on scale validity and reliability.

REFERENCES

Supplementary materials

  • Files in this Data Supplement:

    • view PDF - A new scale to measure tobacco control activity in a country: data tables and questionnaire.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests: LJ, none; MR, none.