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Reprinted
from Tobacco Control in Developing Countries, editors
Prabhat Jha and Frank Chaloupka, with permission from
Oxford University Press (copyright owner), 2000
Chapter 12
Smoking Cessation and Nicotine-Replacement Therapies
Thomas E. Novotny, Jillian Clare Cohen, Ayda Yurekli, David Sweanor,
and Joy de Beyer
Incentives that help smokers
to quit are key components in an effective tobacco-control program. Unaided,
individuals' chances of quitting are low, but success rates are higher
when smokers use nicotine-replacement therapies (NRTs) and other pharmacological
therapies. The current market for NRTs worldwide is small compared with
the market for cigarettes, and is mostly concentrated in high-income countries.
The small market largely reflects low levels of demand, especially in
low-income and middle-income countries. However, the regulation of NRTs,
for example through conditions of sale, also reduces access to them. Public
policy options for increasing access to NRTs include the deregulation
of conditions of sale. In addition, increased public information about
the hazards of smoking and the benefits of cessation appear to be important
for increasing demand for NRTs. Where studies, NRTs have been found to
be cost-effective. Theoretically, these therapies could be publicly financed
for the poorest smokers. In practice, however, it would be difficult to
target those on the lowest incomes.
Chapter 12 (PDF 179KB)
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