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Chapter 18 The Effectiveness and Cost-Effectiveness of Price Increases and Other Tobacco-Control Policies Kent Ranson, Prabhat Jha, Frank J. Chaloupka, and Son Nguyen This
chapter provides conservative estimates of the effectiveness
and cost-effectiveness of tobacco-control policies. Using a
model of the cohort of smokers alive in 1995, we find that
tax increases that would raise the real price of cigarettes
by 10% worldwide would cause about 42 million of these
smokers to quit. This price increase would prevent a minimum
of 10 million tobacco-related deaths. A combined set of
non-price measures (such as comprehensive bans on
advertising and promotion, bans on smoking in public places,
prominent warning labels, and mass information) would cause
some 23 million smokers alive in 1995 to quit and would
prevent 5 million deaths. The non-price measures are assumed
to have an effectiveness of 2% - a conservative assumption.
Increased use of nicotine-replacement therapies (NRTs), with
an assumed effectiveness of 0.5%, would enable some 6
million smokers alive in 1995 to quit and would avert 1
million deaths.
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