Abstract Background There is increasing interest in ending the tobacco epidemic and in applying ‘endgame’ solutions to achieve that goal at national levels. We explored the understanding of, and reactions to, a tobacco-free vision and an endgame approach to tobacco control among New Zealand smokers and non-smokers. Methods We recruited participants in four focus groups held in June 2009: Māori (indigenous people) smokers (n=7); non-Māori smokers (n=6); Māori non-smokers (n=7); and non-Māori non-smokers (n=4). Participants were from the city of Whanganui, New Zealand. We introduced to them the vision of a tobacco-free New Zealand and the concept of a semi-autonomous agency (Tobacco-Free Commission [TFC]) that would control the tobacco market...
Aim To conduct a rapid appraisal of the attitudes of New Zealand decision makers and tobacco control...
Aims: In 2014, in response to evidence that Canada’s tobacco use would lead, inexorably, to substant...
At the beginning of 1998 New Zealand lacked tobac-co dependence treatments. Only a small amount of G...
Abstract Background Tobacco control strategies have mainly targeted reducing demand. Supply-side foc...
Objectives Reducing smoking in young adults, particularly young Māori and Pacific, is vital for redu...
This article discusses the powers available to local authorities in regard to restrictions on sales ...
The tobacco endgame concept reorients discussion away from the persistent control of tobacco toward ...
Objective To inform endgame strategies in tobacco control, this study aimed to estimate the impact o...
ObjectivesFinland boldly legislated the end of tobacco use in its 2010 Tobacco Act, and subsequently...
OBJECTIVE: We examine the potential role for taxation in the tobacco endgame in New Zealand, where t...
The introduction of tobacco to Aotearoa, and the socio-political context in which this occurred, con...
Tobacco is a particularly unusual consumer product in that it is highly addictive, kills over half i...
Background Tobacco use is a leading risk factor for preventable mortality and causes around 5,000 de...
The number of smokers in New Zealand has decreased, but there still are lots of people who smoke dai...
Tobacco is the leading cause of preventable death in New Zealand and is known to cause various types...
Aim To conduct a rapid appraisal of the attitudes of New Zealand decision makers and tobacco control...
Aims: In 2014, in response to evidence that Canada’s tobacco use would lead, inexorably, to substant...
At the beginning of 1998 New Zealand lacked tobac-co dependence treatments. Only a small amount of G...
Abstract Background Tobacco control strategies have mainly targeted reducing demand. Supply-side foc...
Objectives Reducing smoking in young adults, particularly young Māori and Pacific, is vital for redu...
This article discusses the powers available to local authorities in regard to restrictions on sales ...
The tobacco endgame concept reorients discussion away from the persistent control of tobacco toward ...
Objective To inform endgame strategies in tobacco control, this study aimed to estimate the impact o...
ObjectivesFinland boldly legislated the end of tobacco use in its 2010 Tobacco Act, and subsequently...
OBJECTIVE: We examine the potential role for taxation in the tobacco endgame in New Zealand, where t...
The introduction of tobacco to Aotearoa, and the socio-political context in which this occurred, con...
Tobacco is a particularly unusual consumer product in that it is highly addictive, kills over half i...
Background Tobacco use is a leading risk factor for preventable mortality and causes around 5,000 de...
The number of smokers in New Zealand has decreased, but there still are lots of people who smoke dai...
Tobacco is the leading cause of preventable death in New Zealand and is known to cause various types...
Aim To conduct a rapid appraisal of the attitudes of New Zealand decision makers and tobacco control...
Aims: In 2014, in response to evidence that Canada’s tobacco use would lead, inexorably, to substant...
At the beginning of 1998 New Zealand lacked tobac-co dependence treatments. Only a small amount of G...