Incentives for preventing smoking in children and adolescents

Oct 19, 2012The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Using rewards to help children and teens avoid smoking

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Abstract

A pooled analysis of 3 randomized controlled trials with 3056 participants found no statistically significant effect of incentives on preventing smoking initiation among children and adolescents.

  • Incentive programs aimed at preventing youth smoking initiation have shown little robust evidence of effectiveness.
  • Only one study reported a significant effect of the Smokefree Class Competition on smoking prevention, but it had multiple biases.
  • The pooled relative risk for robust trials was 1.00, suggesting no long-term impact of incentives on smoking uptake.
  • Non-randomized trials also failed to demonstrate a significant effect on smoking initiation.
  • Insufficient information was available to assess the dose-response relationship or the costs associated with incentive programs.

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Full Text

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