• Lancet · Nov 2023

    Health, economic, and equity consequences of future tobacco control policies in England: a microsimulation study.

    • Vincy Huang, Iain Buchan, Simon Capewell, and Chris Kypridemos.
    • Department of Public Health, Policy & Systems, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK. Electronic address: vincyhwj@liverpool.ac.uk.
    • Lancet. 2023 Nov 1; 402 Suppl 1: S52S52.

    BackgroundSmoking still generates a huge, costly, and inequitable burden of disease. The UK tobacco-free generation target to reduce smoking prevalence to below 5% by 2030 will be missed if current trends continue. We aimed to determine whether additional policies could speed progress towards meeting the tobacco-free generation target.MethodsWe developed, calibrated, and validated a microsimulation model, IMPACTHINT simulating English adults aged 30-89 years from 2023 to 2072. The model included a detailed smoking history and quantified policy health outcomes including smoking prevalence and smoking-related diseases, economics, and equity. We simulated five scenarios: (1) baseline trends; (2) increasing the minimum age of access to tobacco to 21 years (MinAge21); (3) a 30% increase in tobacco duty (TaxUP); (4) improved smoking cessation services (ServicesUP); and (5) a combination of TaxUP and ServicesUP. We estimated the smoking prevalence, smoking-related diseases and cumulative cases prevented or postponed, and deaths. We evaluated the scenario cost-effectiveness from the societal perspective. Lastly, we analysed the results by deprivation quintile. We present in our findings cumulative cases prevented or postponed over 50 years.FindingsNone of the scenarios would reduce overall smoking prevalence to below 5% by 2030. However, that goal could be reached by 2035 under the TaxUP and the combination of TaxUP and ServicesUP scenarios, by 2037 under the ServicesUP scenario, or by 2038 under the MinAge21 and the baseline scenarios. By 2072, the combined scenario might reduce smoking-related diseases by 160 000 cases (95% CI 140 000-200 000), greatly exceeding the reductions by 140 000 cases (120 000-180 000) with TaxUP, 69 000 cases (53 000-86 000) with MinAge21, or 22 000 cases (14 000-31 000) with ServicesUP. Some 50% of all disease-years reduced by TaxUP would occur in the most deprived quintile. The most affluent quintile could reach the 5% goal sooner than the most deprived quintile (by 2032 for the least deprived vs 2038 for the most deprived), and it could reach the 5% target by 2030 under the combined TaxUP and ServicesUP scenario. Finally, all policies would save costs compared with the baseline trend.InterpretationAffluent groups will achieve the 5% tobacco-free goal a decade sooner than the most deprived. However, that goal could be achieved in all groups by 2035 through a 30% increase in tax and enhanced smoking cessation services. Our limitations included the uncertainties of any 50-year forecast. However, that long time-horizon can capture the potential policy benefits for younger age groups.FundingEconomic and Social Research Council.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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