Next Steps for Tobacco Control: Inaugural Research Seminar on Retail Settings and NRT
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This seminar explores pivotal findings on the role of retailers and Nicotine Replacement Therapies (NRT) in tobacco control. Evidence shows a significant percentage of smokers purchase tobacco from dairies, yet only a small fraction utilize NRT during quit attempts. The seminar advocates for legislative measures to mandate NRT availability at all tobacco sale points, promoting a safer option for smokers. Discussions include retailer perspectives, training support, and the potential of NRT as an integral part of harm reduction strategies, essential for effective tobacco control.
Next Steps for Tobacco Control: Inaugural Research Seminar on Retail Settings and NRT
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Presentation Transcript
Inaugural Research Seminar Point of sale displays and beyond: The next steps for tobacco control in retail settings
Retailers and NRT • 67% smokers regularly purchase tobacco from dairies • Only 20% smokers used NRT for their last quit attempt • Pharmacy –75% via Quitcard • Pharmacy – 14% purchase • Supermarket – 2% • 52% smokers believe nicotine major cause of cancer Regulation + marketing
Retailers and NRT “That nicotine replacement therapies be required to be sold everywhere tobacco is sold, thereby ensuring smokers can choose a safe option whenever they crave nicotine.” Māori select committee 2010 Tobacco retailers as quit providers?
ABC Retail outlets • A – Ask • B – Brief Advice • – automated Quitline referral • C – Cessation Treatment and Support • supply nicotine replacement
22 retailer interviews 2010 • 9 dairies sold tobacco + displays • 5 sold tobacco - no displays • 8 did not sell tobacco • 1 sold NRT, 4 tried –little demand no distribution support • 18 positive about cessation products • 3 offer brief advice would become quit card providers • 11 support legal requirement to sell quit products Williman et al CTRU, NZMJ 29 April 2011, Vol 124 No 1333;
Retailing NRT….next steps….? • Industry • Retail important since advertising bans • organised coalition of retailers to oppose change • Financial loss for retailers • Delay via courts • Retailers • National survey – all tobacco retail types • Need legislation for NRT provision at POS • Retail licensing • Training support compensation for retailers • Linkage to Quitline • Promotion and supply NRT – how ? Subsidised? • NRT “marketing” –widest variety of types • Longterm supply for harm reduction? (Out of sight evidence on the tobacco retail environment in NZ and overseas Report Cancer Soc an ASH, Thomson et al.)