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Tobacco & Nicotine
Articles in this collection address important topics in tobacco and nicotine use, including smoking policy, smoking prevention program evaluation, trends in nicotine use, public health costs of tobacco-related diseases, and the sociodemographic and economic factors that influence smoking behavior.
5 Results
- Editorial
CHARTing the Future Course of Tobacco-Cessation Interventions for Hospitalized Smokers
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 51Issue 4p549–550Published in issue: October, 2016- Nancy A. Rigotti
- Catherine M. Stoney
Cited in Scopus: 10Eight articles in this issue give readers the unusual opportunity of seeing together the results of multiple clinical trials with a common goal—in this case, identifying effective strategies for implementing tobacco-cessation interventions among hospitalized cigarette smokers. Seven trials are included in a Theme Issue that reports the findings of the NIH-funded Consortium of Hospitals to Advance Research on Tobacco (CHART).1–8 An additional paper outside the Theme Issue reports the findings of an independently funded trial with the same goal. - From APTR
Clinical Prevention and Population Health Curriculum Framework
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 49Issue 2A5–A13Published in issue: August, 2015Cited in Scopus: 0 - EditorialOpen Access
A Brief History of the Tobacco Settlement in Oklahoma
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 48Issue 1SupplementS3–S5Published in issue: January, 2015- D. Robert McCaffree
- Tracey Strader
- Julie Bisbee
Cited in Scopus: 1The 1998 national multistate Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) with the major cigarette manufacturers in the U.S. cultivated hope that payments from that settlement would be used to fund proven programs to prevent and reduce tobacco use. By 2002, tobacco prevention funding across all states reached an all-time high of nearly $750 million per year. However, that early promise was not sustained. Within just 2 years, state funding for tobacco prevention was reduced by more than $200 million. - EditorialOpen Access
Oklahoma’s Success in Reducing the Toll of Tobacco
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 48Issue 1SupplementS1–S2Published in issue: January, 2015- Mary Fallin
Cited in Scopus: 0As Governor of the State of Oklahoma, my goal is to create and maintain a happy, healthy, and productive state, but we cannot expect to improve the health of Oklahomans without addressing our state’s number one killer: tobacco. In fact, both of my parents died from smoking-related illnesses. After years of smoking, my father died from heart disease when he was younger than I am today. My mother smoked her whole life. At the age of 73 she had heart surgery, suffered a stroke, and was bedridden for five years before passing away. - In BriefOpen Access
Table of Contents
American Journal of Preventive MedicineVol. 47Issue 2SupplementA3Published in issue: August, 2014Cited in Scopus: 0