Reducing the number and types of tobacco retail outlets in the Netherlands: Study protocol for a comprehensive mixed-methods policy evaluation

The Netherlands plans to ban tobacco sales in supermarkets in 2024. In a comprehensive policy evaluation, we aim to examine: 1) the impact of the policy on the number and types of tobacco outlets, 2) the impact on attitudes and behaviors of smoking adults and non-smoking youth, and 3) the influence of the tobacco industry on the policy process and the retail environment. In addition, our study focusses on differential effects in disadvantaged neighborhoods, where both smoking rates and tobacco outlet density are typically highest. This study brings together economic, psychological, and journal... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Nagelhout, G.E.
Poole, N.L.
Metze, M.
Willemsen, M.C.
Vermeulen, W.
van den Brand, F.A.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Reihe/Periodikum: Nagelhout , G E , Poole , N L , Metze , M , Willemsen , M C , Vermeulen , W & van den Brand , F A 2023 , ' Reducing the number and types of tobacco retail outlets in the Netherlands: Study protocol for a comprehensive mixed-methods policy evaluation ' , Tobacco prevention & cessation , vol. 9 , no. 1 , 8 . https://doi.org/10.18332/tpc/161825
Schlagwörter: tobacco policy evaluation / sales ban social class deprived / neighborhoods supermarkets / IMPACT
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27206031
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://cris.maastrichtuniversity.nl/en/publications/47f82422-5196-4e9e-bacd-9d15a5744c86

The Netherlands plans to ban tobacco sales in supermarkets in 2024. In a comprehensive policy evaluation, we aim to examine: 1) the impact of the policy on the number and types of tobacco outlets, 2) the impact on attitudes and behaviors of smoking adults and non-smoking youth, and 3) the influence of the tobacco industry on the policy process and the retail environment. In addition, our study focusses on differential effects in disadvantaged neighborhoods, where both smoking rates and tobacco outlet density are typically highest. This study brings together economic, psychological, and journalistic research methods. We investigate the impact of the new legislation on the number and type of tobacco outlets, and on the number of smokers by using routinely collected population monitoring data. We examine the impact of the legislation on smoking susceptibility of non-smoking youth and on impulse tobacco purchases by smoking adults with yearly quantitative surveys and with qualitative interviews and discussion sessions. We describe whether these impacts differ for disadvantaged versus non-disadvantaged neighborhoods. We investigate what strategies the tobacco industry uses to influence the new legislation, policy processes, and the tobacco retail environment by performing a journalistic investigation, by means of documents obtained by Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, (possibly) leaked documents from insider meetings, and interviews with insiders. The methods of our evaluation can be used as a model for other comprehensive public policy evaluations. REGISTRATION: Clinical Trials ID NCT05554120, Protocol ID KWF140282021-2. ABBREVIATIONS FOIA: Freedom of Information Act. SES-WOA: socioeconomic scores of private households. MCID: minimal clinically important difference.