Louisville Medicine Volume 67, Issue 1 | Page 10

PUBLIC HEALTH CURBING NICOTINE USE THROUGH POLICY CHANGE AND COLLABORATION AUTHOR Sarah Moyer, MD, MPH P ublic health literature over the past 20 years has asserted the importance of policy change and collaboration across various sectors of the commu- nity to improve population health. Increasing taxes on tobacco products, for example, can improve the health of our city by reducing the number of people using these products and preventing young people from beginning their use. That’s why last year the Greater Louisville Medical Society (GLMS), the Department of Public Health and Wellness, the Foun- dation for a Healthy Kentucky and many others across the state advocated for a $1 increase to the state tobacco tax. GLMS, the Department of Public Health and Wellness, and oth- ers have long advocated for an increase in the tobacco tax. Coming Together for Hope Healing and Recovery, Louisville’s two-year plan to address substance misuse in the city; the 2017 Health Equity Plan and Healthy Louisville 2020 all call for increasing the tobacco tax. 8 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE A huge body of research (The US Surgeon General, 2014; Cha- loupka, 1999; the National Bureau of Economic Research, 2001 to name but a few) shows that making tobacco products more expen- sive through higher taxes lowers smoking rates and prevents young people from taking up the habit. Polls taken throughout Kentucky over the past 10 years also indicate that an increase in tobacco taxes is one tax hike that voters support. While we were not successful in getting the full $1 tax increase last year, we did get a 50-cent increase that went into effect on July 1, 2018. In January, the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky released the results of the most recent Kentucky Health Issues Poll (KHIP). The poll found that 39 percent of Kentucky smokers cut back the number of cigarettes they smoked, 33 percent considered quitting, and 26 percent actually tried to quit because of the cigarette price increase. This is one small step in our efforts to improve the health of Louisville residents through policy change. While smoking rates have been gradually coming down in recent years, the adult smoking rate of 25.5% in Louisville remains well above the national rate of 15.1%.