Understanding perceived availability and importance of tobacco control interventions to inform European adoption of a UK economic model: a cross-sectional study
Author
Kulchaitanaroaj, Puttarin
Kaló, Zoltán
West, Robert
Cheung, Kei Long
Evers, Silvia
Vokó, Zoltán
Hiligsmann, Mickael
de Vries, Hein
Owen, Lesley
Trapero-Bertran, Marta
Leidl, Reiner
Pokhrel, Subhash
Publication date
2018-02-14ISSN
1472-6963
Abstract
Background:
The evidence on the extent to which stakeholders in different European countries agree with availability and importance of tobacco-control interventions is limited. This study assessed and compared stakeholders’ views from five European countries and compared the perceived ranking of interventions with evidence-based ranking using cost-effectiveness data.
Methods:
An interview survey (face-to-face, by phone or Skype) was conducted between April and July 2014 with five categories of stakeholders - decision makers, service purchasers, service providers, evidence generators and health promotion advocates - from Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom. A list of potential stakeholders drawn from the research team’s contacts and snowballing served as the sampling frame. An email invitation was sent to all stakeholders in this list and recruitment was based on positive replies. Respondents were asked to rate availability and importance of 30 tobacco control interventions. Kappa coefficients assessed agreement of stakeholders’ views. A mean importance score for each intervention was used to rank the interventions. This ranking was compared with the ranking based on cost-effectiveness data from a published review.
Results:
Ninety-three stakeholders (55.7% response rate) completed the survey: 18.3% were from Germany, 17.2% from Hungary, 30.1% from the Netherlands, 19.4% from Spain, and 15.1% from the UK. Of those, 31.2% were decision makers, 26.9% evidence generators, 19.4% service providers, 15.1% health-promotion advocates, and 7.5% purchasers of services/pharmaceutical products. Smoking restrictions in public areas were rated as the most important intervention (mean score = 1.89). The agreement on availability of interventions between the stakeholders was very low (kappa = 0.098; 95% CI = [0.085, 0.111] but the agreement on the importance of the interventions was fair (kappa = 0.239; 95% CI = [0.208, 0.253]). A correlation was found between availability and importance rankings for stage-based interventions. The importance ranking was not statistically concordant with the ranking based on published cost-effectiveness data (Kendall rank correlation coefficient = 0.40; p-value = 0.11; 95% CI = [− 0.09, 0.89]).
Conclusions:
The intrinsic differences in stakeholder views must be addressed while transferring economic evidence Europe-wide. Strong engagement with stakeholders, focussing on better communication, has a potential to mitigate this challenge.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Accepted version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
338 - Situació econòmica. Política econòmica. Gestió, control i planificació de l'economia. Producció. Serveis. Turisme. Preus
61 - Medicina
Keywords
Tabac
Tobacco
Tabaco
Política econòmica
Economic policy
Política económica
Tabaquismo
Tabaquisme
Tobacco habit
Pages
12
Publisher
BMC
Collection
18;115
Is part of
BMC Health Services Research
Citation
Kulchaitanaroaj, Puttarin; Kaló, Zoltán; West, Robert et al. «Understanding perceived availability and importance of tobacco control interventions to inform European adoption of a UK economic model: a cross-sectional study». BMC Health Services Research, 2018, vol. 18, art. 115. Disponible en: <https://bmchealthservres.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12913-018-2923-2>. Fecha de acceso: 21 ene. 2020. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-2923-2
Grant agreement number
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/602270
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/