![]() ![]() This public health assessment for e-cigarettes supports integration of the evidence on the health impacts of e-cigarettes and its application to policy and practice in Australia. Public health assessment of electronic cigarettes for Australia Report prepared for the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, September 2021 Nicotine e-cigarettes for smoking cessation: Evidence to support guideline development. Available at: īanks E, Yazidjoglou A, Brown S, Day C. Final report prepared for the Australian Government Department of Health: online version, September 2021. ![]() Efficacy of e-cigarettes as aids to cessation of combustible tobacco smoking: updated evidence review. ![]() Yazidjoglou A, Ford L, Baenziger O, Brown S, Martin M, Zulfiqar T, Joshy G, Beckwith K, Banks E. Commissioned Report for the Australian Government Department of Health, September 2020. Summary report on use of e-cigarettes and impact on tobacco smoking uptake and cessation, relevant to the Australian context. Resources and Related Outputsīanks E, Beckwith K, Joshy G. Reviewing evidence on the efficacy of e-cigarettes for smoking cessation is important for understanding their impacts on public health and is the subject of these reviews. In many countries, e-cigarettes are marketed as aids to smoking cessation – explicitly or implicitly – and, among e-cigarette users, smoking cessation is a commonly reported reason for use. Smokers increasingly motivated and able to quit as smoking prevalence falls: umbrella and systematic review of evidence relevant to the ‘hardening hypothesis’, considering transcendence of manufactured doubt. Harris, M., Martin, M., Yazidjoglou, A., Ford, L., Lucas, R. This work systematically reviews the world-wide evidence on the topic. Population “softening” reflects the converse, whereby tobacco control makes the smoker population more motivated and able to quit. The “hardening hypothesis” proposes that as the prevalence of smoking in a population declines, a greater proportion of the remaining smokers will have less motivation to quit, be more dependent on smoking, will make fewer quit attempts and will be less likely to quit. ![]() arXiv:2202.02923Ĭharacteristics of smoker populations as smoking prevalence declinesĪs smoking prevalence declines, it is important to understand the behavioural trajectory of the population of smokers. Bayesian calibration of simulation models: A tutorial and an Australian smoking behavior model. Wade S, Weber M, Sarich P, Vaneckova P, Behar-Harpaz S, Ngo P, Cressman S, Gartner C, Murray J, Blakely T, Banks E, Tammemagi M, Canfell K, Caruana M. (2021) Birthcohort estimates of smoking initiation and prevalence in 20th century Australia: Synthesis of data from 33 surveys and 385,810 participants. Vaneckova P, Wade S, Weber M, Murray JM, Grogan P, Caruana M, et al. A review of evidence on the prevalence of and trends in cigarette and e-cigarette use by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth and adults, September 2020 Thurber K, Walker J, Maddox R, Marmor A, Heris C, Banks E, Lovett R. Understanding tobacco smoking prevalence and trends in Australia is important for considering likely impacts of e-cigarettes on health. Despite low and falling prevalence, tobacco smoking remains Australia’s deadliest habit, accounting for 9% of the total burden of illness and death. ![]()
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