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a special susceptibility to even <br />experimental tobacco use. <br />1 Low <br />minimum sales age laws exploit <br />that susceptibility to addict youths <br />to cigarettes for life, with relatively <br />few cigarettes. Meanwhile, raising <br />the sales age would appear likely <br />to have a significant effect on <br />current tobacco use rates among <br />youths, decreasing the chances of <br />a person ever becoming tobacco <br />dependent. By some estimates, <br />raising the tobacco sales age to 21 <br />years would reduce tobacco use <br />prevalence by 55% for 15- to <br />17-year-old adolescents within <br />7 years. <br />16 <br />In 2005, Needham, Massachu- <br />setts, was the first town in the <br />country to implement the law to <br />raise the tobacco sales age to 21 <br />years. Following the implementa- <br />tion of the law, the Youth Risk <br />Behavior Surveillance System <br />and Metro West Health Founda- <br />tions’Adolescent Health survey <br />data showed a 47% reduction in <br />Needham high-school smoking <br />rate in the 4 years (2006---2010) <br />after the legislation was imple- <br />mented.17 Of note, no tobacco re- <br />tailers have gone out of business in <br />Needham since implementation. <br />LIMITATIONS <br />Although we have not spe- <br />cifically accounted for other non- <br />cigarette tobacco or smokeless <br />tobacco sales, we have accounted <br />for any tobacco that is smoked and <br />self-reported as a cigarette, the <br />form that has the highest disease <br />burden. According to the Centers <br />for Disease Control and Preven- <br />tion’s Morbidity and Mortality <br />Weekly Report, about 90% of all <br />combustible tobacco consumption <br />is cigarettes among adult smokers. <br />18 <br />In addition, 2012 National Youth <br />Tobacco Survey data indicate that <br />the majority of tobacco consump- <br />tion remains cigarettes, and high- <br />school students in the young adult <br />age range (>17 years) are 3 times <br />more likely to smoke cigarettes <br />daily than use any other combina- <br />tion of cigars, bidis, and cigarillos <br />on a daily basis. <br />Adult versus youth smokeless <br />tobacco use rates and amount <br />consumed are much harder to <br />quantify and we intentionally ex- <br />cluded these to avoid reporting <br />bias. In addition, the US retail <br />cigarette market is more than 30 <br />times greater than the smokeless <br />tobacco market, making any adult <br />versus youth consumption dis- <br />crepancy unlikely to change our <br />overall estimate of the tobacco <br />sales impact. <br />19 <br />CONCLUSIONS <br />Overall, a small percentage <br />of total tobacco sales (2%) is at- <br />tributed to those younger than <br />21years, yet most lifetime tobacco <br />users start smoking before the <br />age of 21 years. Early tobacco <br />initiation during young adulthood <br />comes with a high probability of <br />addiction, progression to daily <br />smoking, and heavier tobacco use <br />in adulthood, and has long-term <br />harmful health consequences. <br />Action on this critical issue of raising <br />the minimum tobacco sales age to <br />21 years across the United States <br />has excellent public health and <br />ethical rationales, and costs almost <br />nothing to implement through <br />existing regulatory frameworks.j <br />About the Authors <br />Jonathan P. Winickoff, Minghua L. Chen, <br />and Emara Nabi-Burza are with the <br />Center for Child and Adolescent Health <br />Research and Policy, Division of General <br />Academic Pediatrics, Massachusetts <br />General Hospital for Children, Boston. <br />Lester Hartman is with Westwood/ <br />Mansfield Pediatrics, Westwood, MA. <br />Mark Gottlieb is with the Public Health <br />Advocacy Institute, Northeastern Univer- <br />sity School of Law, Boston. Joseph R. <br />DiFranza is with the Department of Family <br />Medicine and Community Health, Univer- <br />sity of Massachusetts Medical School, <br />Worcester, MA. <br />CorrespondenceshouldbesenttoJonathan <br />P. Winickoff, MD, MPH, Center for Child <br />and Adolescent Health Research and Policy, <br />Division of General Academic Pediatrics, <br />MassachusettsGeneralHospitalforChildren, <br />15th Floor, Suite 1542A, 100 Cambridge <br />St, Boston, MA 02114 (e-mail: jwinickoff@ <br />partners.org). Reprints can be ordered at <br />http://www.ajph.orgbyclickingthe “Reprints” <br />link. <br />This article was accepted June 26, <br />2014. <br />Contributors <br />J. P. Winickoff originated and designed <br />this study, drafted the article and revised <br />it, and takes full responsibility for the <br />final submission. L. Hartman, M. Gottlieb, <br />E. Nabi-Burza, and J. R. DiFranza made <br />substantial intellectual contributions to <br />the conceptualization and design of the <br />study, and to editing the article. M. L. <br />Chen advised on and conducted data <br />analyses, and participated in the inter- <br />pretation of results. All authors approved <br />the final article as submitted. <br />Acknowledgments <br />This study was supported by the Na- <br />tional Institutes of Health, National <br />Cancer Institute grant R01-CA127127 <br />(J. P. Winickoff) and 2R01-CA087571 <br />(M. Gottlieb), the National Institute on <br />Drug Abuse, and the Agency for Health- <br />care Research and Quality. <br />Note.The funders had no role in the <br />design or conduct of the study, analysis <br />and interpretation of the data, or prepa- <br />ration, review and approval of the article. <br />HumanParticipantProtection <br />This study was exempt from institutional <br />review board approval because it is a <br />secondary data analysis of a publicly <br />available data set. <br />References <br />1. DiFranza JR, Wellman R, Mermelstein <br />R, et al. The natural history and diagnosis <br />of nicotine addiction.Curr Pediatr Rev. <br />2011;7:88---96. <br />2. Zhan W, Dierker LC, Rose JS, Selya <br />A, Mermelstein RJ. The natural course of <br />nicotine dependence symptoms among <br />adolescent smokers.Nicotine Tob Res. <br />2012;14(12):1445---1452. <br />3. Taioli E, Wynder EL. Effect of <br />the age at which smoking begins on <br />frequency of smoking in adulthood. <br />N Engl J Med. 1991;325(13):968---969. <br />4. US Department of Health and <br />Human Services. Preventing tobacco use <br />TABLE 2—Average Cigarette Consumption by Age for Current Smokers and Percentage of 18- to 20-Year-Old Smokers as a Percentage <br />of Total Adult Cigarette Consumption: 2011 National Health Interview Survey, United States <br />Variable <br />All Participants Aged ‡18 Years, <br />Mean of No. <br />Participants Aged <br />18–20 Years <br />Participants <br />Aged ‡21 Years <br />Participants Aged 18–20 Years, <br />% of Total Sample <br />Average daily cigarette consumption per smoker 12.38 8.57 12.50 <br />Average annual cigarette consumption per smoker 4520.28 3131.62 4564.16 <br />No. of current smokers 6138 188 3.06 <br />Total no. of cigarettes smoked in 2011 27745475 588745 2.12 <br />Note. Current smokers included both daily and nondaily users, and lifetime consumption of greater than 100 cigarettes. The same size was n=33014 participants, including n=6138 current <br />smokers; 18.6% of the population reported lifetime use of greater than 100 cigarettes and some level of current use. <br />PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY BRIEFS <br />e20 |Public Health Policy Briefs |Peer Reviewed |Winickoff et al.American Journal of Public Health |November 2014, Vol 104, No. 11