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Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK

BACKGROUND: From April 6(th) 2015, all small shops in the UK were required to cover up tobacco products at point of sale (POS) to protect children from exposure. As part of a larger 5-year study to measure the impact of the legislation in Scotland, an audit was conducted to assess level and nature o...

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Autores principales: Eadie, Douglas, Stead, Martine, MacKintosh, Anne Marie, Murray, Susan, Best, Catherine, Pearce, Jamie, Tisch, Catherine, van der Sluijs, Winfried, Amos, Amanda, MacGregor, Andy, Haw, Sally
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4809504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27019418
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152178
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author Eadie, Douglas
Stead, Martine
MacKintosh, Anne Marie
Murray, Susan
Best, Catherine
Pearce, Jamie
Tisch, Catherine
van der Sluijs, Winfried
Amos, Amanda
MacGregor, Andy
Haw, Sally
author_facet Eadie, Douglas
Stead, Martine
MacKintosh, Anne Marie
Murray, Susan
Best, Catherine
Pearce, Jamie
Tisch, Catherine
van der Sluijs, Winfried
Amos, Amanda
MacGregor, Andy
Haw, Sally
author_sort Eadie, Douglas
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: From April 6(th) 2015, all small shops in the UK were required to cover up tobacco products at point of sale (POS) to protect children from exposure. As part of a larger 5-year study to measure the impact of the legislation in Scotland, an audit was conducted to assess level and nature of compliance with the ban immediately following its introduction. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A discreet observational audit was conducted 7–14 days post implementation which took measures of physical changes made to cover products, server/assistant practices, tobacco signage and advertising, and communication of price information. The audit was conducted in all small retail outlets (n = 83) selling tobacco in four communities in Scotland selected to represent different levels of urbanisation and social deprivation. Data were analysed descriptively. RESULTS: Compliance with the legislation was high, with 98% of shops removing tobacco from permanent display and non-compliance was restricted almost entirely to minor contraventions. The refurbishment of shops with new or adapted tobacco storage units resulted in the removal of nearly all commercial brand messages and images from POS, dropping from 51% to 4%. The majority of shops stored their tobacco in public-facing storage units (81%). Most shops also displayed at least one generic tobacco message (88%). CONCLUSIONS: Compliance with Scottish prohibitions on display of tobacco products in small retail outlets was high immediately after the legislation implementation date. However, although tobacco branding is no longer visible in retail outlets, tobacco storage units with generic tobacco messages are still prominent. This points towards a need to monitor how the space vacated by tobacco products is utilised and to better understand how the continuing presence of tobacco storage units influences people’s awareness and understanding of tobacco and smoking. Countries with existing POS bans and who are considering such bans should pay particular attention to regulations regarding the use of generic signage and where within the retail setting tobacco stocks can be stored.
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spelling pubmed-48095042016-04-05 Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK Eadie, Douglas Stead, Martine MacKintosh, Anne Marie Murray, Susan Best, Catherine Pearce, Jamie Tisch, Catherine van der Sluijs, Winfried Amos, Amanda MacGregor, Andy Haw, Sally PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: From April 6(th) 2015, all small shops in the UK were required to cover up tobacco products at point of sale (POS) to protect children from exposure. As part of a larger 5-year study to measure the impact of the legislation in Scotland, an audit was conducted to assess level and nature of compliance with the ban immediately following its introduction. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A discreet observational audit was conducted 7–14 days post implementation which took measures of physical changes made to cover products, server/assistant practices, tobacco signage and advertising, and communication of price information. The audit was conducted in all small retail outlets (n = 83) selling tobacco in four communities in Scotland selected to represent different levels of urbanisation and social deprivation. Data were analysed descriptively. RESULTS: Compliance with the legislation was high, with 98% of shops removing tobacco from permanent display and non-compliance was restricted almost entirely to minor contraventions. The refurbishment of shops with new or adapted tobacco storage units resulted in the removal of nearly all commercial brand messages and images from POS, dropping from 51% to 4%. The majority of shops stored their tobacco in public-facing storage units (81%). Most shops also displayed at least one generic tobacco message (88%). CONCLUSIONS: Compliance with Scottish prohibitions on display of tobacco products in small retail outlets was high immediately after the legislation implementation date. However, although tobacco branding is no longer visible in retail outlets, tobacco storage units with generic tobacco messages are still prominent. This points towards a need to monitor how the space vacated by tobacco products is utilised and to better understand how the continuing presence of tobacco storage units influences people’s awareness and understanding of tobacco and smoking. Countries with existing POS bans and who are considering such bans should pay particular attention to regulations regarding the use of generic signage and where within the retail setting tobacco stocks can be stored. Public Library of Science 2016-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4809504/ /pubmed/27019418 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152178 Text en © 2016 Eadie et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Eadie, Douglas
Stead, Martine
MacKintosh, Anne Marie
Murray, Susan
Best, Catherine
Pearce, Jamie
Tisch, Catherine
van der Sluijs, Winfried
Amos, Amanda
MacGregor, Andy
Haw, Sally
Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK
title Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK
title_full Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK
title_fullStr Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK
title_full_unstemmed Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK
title_short Are Retail Outlets Complying with National Legislation to Protect Children from Exposure to Tobacco Displays at Point of Sale? Results from the First Compliance Study in the UK
title_sort are retail outlets complying with national legislation to protect children from exposure to tobacco displays at point of sale? results from the first compliance study in the uk
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4809504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27019418
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152178
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