Journal Articles
Increasing Tobacco Cessation in America: A Consumer Demand Perspective
NTCC has developed a supplement to American Journal of Preventive Medicine focused on Consumer Demand. Published in March 2010, the aim of the supplement, “Increasing Tobacco Cessation in America: A Consumer Demand Perspective,” is to call attention to bring a consumer-oriented perspective to population-level tobacco cessation efforts—in order to increase the demand for, and use and reach of, evidence-based treatments, and to spur the wider adoption of policy changes that will make these treatments affordable, accessible, and easier to use.
The articles and commentaries reflect the view that if we could increase consumer’s demand for evidence-based tobacco cessation products and services, many more people would attempt to quit, and would succeed in doing so. To access the online version of the March 2010 Supplement to AJPM, click here.
Increasing Tobacco Cessation in America: A Consumer Demand Perspective
C. Tracy Orleans, Patricia L. Mabry, David B. Abrams
Building Consumer Demand for Tobacco-Cessation Products and Services: The National Tobacco Cessation Collaborative’s Consumer Demand Roundtable
Cathy L. Backinger, Amber Thornton-Bullock, Cindy Miner, C. Tracy Orleans, Karen Siener, Carlo C. DiClemente, Todd M. Phillips, Jessica N. Rowden, Elaine Arkin
The Impact of EX®: Results from a Pilot Smoking Cessation Media Campaign
Donna M. Vallone, Jennifer C. Duke, Paul D. Mowery, Kristen L. McCausland, Haijun Xiao, Jeffrey C. Costantino, Eric T. Asche, Jennifer Cullen, Jane A. Allen
Helpers Program: A Pilot Test of Brief Tobacco Intervention Training in Three Corporations
Myra L. Muramoto, Ken Wassum, Tim Connolly, Eva Matthews, Lysbeth Floden
Public Policy to Maximize Tobacco Cessation
Daniel E. McGoldrick, Ann V. Boonn
Media Campaign Effectiveness in Promoting a Smoking Cessation Program
Karen Davis Czarnecki, Laura E. Vichinsky, Jennifer A. Ellis, Sarah B. Perl
Creating a Perfect Storm to Increase Consumer Demand for Wisconsin's Tobacco Quitline
Megan A. Sheffer, Lezli A. Redmond, Kate H. Kobinsky, Paula A. Keller, Tim McAfee, Michael C. Fiore
Using Tobacco Control Policies to Increase Consumer Demand for Smoking Cessation
Andrew Hyland, K. Michael Cummings
Boosting Population Quits Through Evidence-Based Cessation Treatment and Policy
David B. Abrams, Amanda L. Graham, David T. Levy, Patricia L. Mabry, C. Tracy Orleans
Modeling the Impact of Smoking Cessation Treatment Policies on Quit Rates
David T. Levy, Amanda L. Graham, Patricia L. Mabry, David B. Abrams, C. Tracy Orleans
Reaching Healthy People 2010 by 2013: A SimSmoke Simulation
David T. Levy, Patricia L. Mabry, Amanda L. Graham, C. Tracy Orleans, David B. Abrams
Smoking Cessation Treatment Utilization: The Need for a Consumer Perspective
Saul Shiffman
Increasing Consumer Demand for Tobacco Treatments: Ten Design Recommendations for Clinicians and Healthcare Systems
Susan Swartz Woods, Carlos Roberto Jaén
Simplicity Sells: Making Smoking Cessation Easier
Catherine Bonniot Saucedo, Steven A. Schroeder
Closing Tobacco-Related Disparities: Using Community Organizations to Increase Consumer Demand
Bruce A. Christiansen, Marva J. Brooks, Paula A. Keller, Wendy E. Theobald, Michael C. Fiore
Consumer and Health Literacy: The Need to Better Design Tobacco Cessation Product Packaging, Labels, and Inserts
Stephanie M. Weiss, Stephanie Y. Smith-Simone
A Call for ACTTION: Increasing Access to Tobacco-Use Treatment in Our Nation
Corinne G. Husten
The Journey to the End of Smoking: A Personal and Population Perspective
Carlo C. DiClemente, Janine C. Delahanty, Robert M. Fiedler
Online Consumer Search Strategies for Smoking Cessation Information
Nathan K. Cobb
The Things That Get Measured Are the Things That Get Done
Cathy L. Backinger, Ann M. Malarcher
An Initial Assessment of the Consumer Demand Roundtable: Results and Promise
Dianne C. Barker, Marjorie A. Gutman, Sara R. Gordon