Effects of publicity and a warning letter on illegal cigarette sales to minors
Open Access
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wiley in Australian Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 18 (1) , 39-42
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-6405.1994.tb00192.x
Abstract
The study aimed to assess rates of illegal cigarette sales to children and the impact on these rates of publicity and a warning letter threatening prosecution. Children aged 12 and 13 made two repeat purchasing attempts, three months apart, at 255 randomly selected tobacco retail outlets in Sydney. A randomly selected 50 per cent of retail outlets which sold cigarettes illegally at the first attempt were sent warning letters threatening prosecution. Publicity about the undercover buying operation was organised between the attempts. At the first attempts, 39 per cent of shops sold cigarettes to the children and 32 per cent sold them at the second attempt. Shops which sold on the first occasion and received warning letters reduced selling by 69 per cent compared to the 40 per cent reduction in shops which sold cigarettes on the first attempt and were not sent warning letters, a net reduction of 29 per cent seemingly attributable to the warning letters (95 per cent confidence interval 8 per cent to 50 per cent). It is extremely easy for children as young as 12 to buy cigarettes. The combined effects of publicity about undercover buying operations and warning letters threatening prosecution seem capable of reducing selling by about 29 per cent. Because of inconsistencies in selling or refusals, future attempts to measure selling rates to children should use repeat purchasing attempts and classify outlets as ‘selling’, ‘not selling’ or ‘sometimes selling’.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reducing teenage access to cigarettes in Australia: time to act?The Medical Journal of Australia, 1993
- Evaluation of two school smoking education programmes under normal classroom conditions.BMJ, 1993
- Availability of cigarettes to minorsAustralian Journal of Public Health, 1992
- The Tobacco Institute's "It's the Law" campaign: has it halted illegal sales of tobacco to children?American Journal of Public Health, 1992
- Communitywide smoking prevention: long-term outcomes of the Minnesota Heart Health Program and the Class of 1989 Study.American Journal of Public Health, 1992
- Results from a statewide approach to adolescent tobacco use preventionPreventive Medicine, 1992
- Illegal cigarette sales to children in South AustraliaTobacco Control, 1992
- Active Enforcement of Cigarette Control Laws in the Prevention of Cigarette Sales to MinorsJAMA, 1991
- Sustained effects of an educational program to reduce sales of cigarettes to minors.American Journal of Public Health, 1991
- Reducing the Illegal Sale of Cigarettes to MinorsJAMA, 1989