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Cigarette smoking by socioeconomic group, sex, and age: effects of price, income, and health publicity

471

Citations

16

References

1994

Year

Abstract

Men and women in lower socioeconomic groups are more responsive than are those in higher socioeconomic groups to changes in the price of cigarettes and less to health publicity. Women of all ages, including teenagers, appear to have been less responsive to health publicity than have men but more responsive to price. Response to health publicity decreased linearly with age. Real price increases in cigarettes could narrow differences between socioeconomic groups in smoking and the related inequalities in health, but specific measures would be necessary to ameliorate effects on the most deprived families that may include members who continue to smoke. The use of a policy to steadily increase cigarette tax is likely to help achieve the government's targets for smoking and smoking related diseases.

References

YearCitations

1969

3.2K

1988

1.1K

1986

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1991

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1982

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1990

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1990

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1990

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1984

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1987

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