• J Urban Health · Mar 2005

    Comparative Study

    Smoking practices in New York City: the use of a population-based survey to guide policy-making and programming.

    • Farzad Mostashari, Bonnie D Kerker, Anjum Hajat, Nancy Miller, and Thomas R Frieden.
    • Bureau of Epidemiology Services, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York, NY 10013, USA. fmostash@health.nyc.gov
    • J Urban Health. 2005 Mar 1; 82 (1): 58-70.

    AbstractTo inform New York City's (NYC's) tobacco control program, we identified the neighborhoods with the highest smoking rates, estimated the burden of second-hand smoke exposure, assessed the early response to state taxation, and examined cessation practices. We used a stratified random design to conduct a digit-dialed telephone survey in 2002 among 9,674 New York City adults. Our main outcome measures included prevalence of cigarette smoking, exposure to second-hand smoke, the response of smokers to state tax increases, and cessation practices. Even after controlling for sociodemographic factors (age, race/ethnicity, income, education, marital status, employment status, and foreign-born status) smoking rates were highest in Central Harlem and in the South Bronx. Sixteen percent of nonsmokers reported frequent exposure to second-hand smoke at home or in a workplace. Among smokers with a child with asthma, only 33% reported having a no-smoking policy in their homes. More than one fifth of smokers reported reducing the number of cigarettes they smoked in response to the state tax increase. Of current smokers who tried to quit, 65% used no cessation aid. These data were used to inform New York City's smoke-free legislation, taxation, public education, and a free nicotine patch give-away program. In conclusion, large, local surveys can provide essential data to effectively advocate for, plan, implement, and evaluate a comprehensive tobacco control program.

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