RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Cigarette butts near building entrances: what is the impact of smoke-free college campus policies? JF Tobacco Control JO Tob Control FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP 107 OP 112 DO 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050152 VO 22 IS 2 A1 Joseph G L Lee A1 Leah M Ranney A1 Adam O Goldstein YR 2013 UL http://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/22/2/107.abstract AB Background Indoor and outdoor tobacco-free campus policies for schools, hospitals and universities are increasingly being adopted. Yet, little direct evidence exists on the impact of tobacco-free campuses on tobacco outcomes. Objectives To identify differences in cigarettes smoked at main campus building entrances by campus policy strength. Methods Researchers collected cigarette butts (n=3427) at main building entrances (n=67) at baseline and follow-up on 19 community college campuses stratified by strength of campus outdoor tobacco policy (none, perimeter/designated area, 100% tobacco free). Outcome measures included the number of butts per day at building entrances averaged to create a campus score. Analysis of variance techniques examined differences in scores by the strength of campuses' outdoor tobacco policy. Results One hundred per cent tobacco-free community college campuses had significantly fewer cigarette butts at doors than campuses with no outdoor restrictions. Butts on community college campuses with partial policies were not statistically different from campuses with no policy or campuses with a 100% tobacco-free policy but indicated that a dose–response relationship may exist. Conclusions This study provides some of the first evidence on the impact of 100% tobacco-free outdoor policies on college campuses using an objective and reproducible measure. Such policies likely provide a more healthful environment for students, staff, faculty and visitors.