Regular ArticleAsking Age and Identification May Decrease Minors' Access to Tobacco☆
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Retail outlets prompt associative memories linked to the repeated use of nicotine and tobacco products among alternative high school students in California
2019, Addictive BehaviorsCitation Excerpt :She considers buying the e-cigarette but it is too costly so she chooses the cigars (Delnevo, Giovenco, & Miller Lo, 2017). She purchases the product even though she is underage (Landrine, Klonoff, & Alcaraz, 1996). Under current tobacco control policy in the United States, this is the environment in which youth are expected to make a reasoned decision about the consequences of using nicotine and tobacco products (NTPs).
The Multiple Baseline Design for Evaluating Population-Based Research
2007, American Journal of Preventive MedicineCitation Excerpt :For example, using a multiple baseline design, Biglan et al.51 combined merchant education with other interventions to reduce the number of tobacco outlets willing to sell to young people. Their interventions and results were consistent with previous merchant education research,52,53 adding credibility to the findings. Intervention effects in public health can be small and difficult to detect.
Sociocultural variables in youth access to tobacco: Replication 5 years later
2000, Preventive MedicineThe relationship between tobacco access and use among adolescents: A four community study
1999, Social Science and Medicine
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Supported by funds provided by the Cigarette and Tobacco Surtax Fund of the State of California through the University of California Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program Grant 4RT-0348.
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