Journal article
Tobacco control interventions for populations living in subsidised, low-income housing: a scoping review
G Lai, K Morphett, DA Ouakrim, KE Mason, S Howe, VW Rees, S Li, C Gartner
Public Health Research and Practice | SAX INST | Published : 2024
DOI: 10.17061/phrp3412407
Abstract
Objectives: People living in subsidised low-income housing are more likely to smoke and experience secondhand smoke exposure compared to the general population. While tobacco control interventions have yielded substantial population health benefits, people living in subsidised housing experience a greater burden of tobacco-related harms. We synthesised existing peer-reviewed and grey literature to determine tobacco control interventions that have been implemented in subsidised housing globally, and to understand their impact on smoking and secondhand smoke exposure. Methods: We searched five databases for peer-reviewed research, and Google Advanced for grey literature. We adhered to the JBI ..
View full abstractRelated Projects (1)
Grants
Awarded by University of Melbourne
Funding Acknowledgements
We would like to acknowledge and thank Han-Yu Lin and Shaun Foo for their assistance with evidence screening and preliminary data extraction. GL holds a University of Queensland Research Training Scholarship and Research Higher Degree Top-up Scholarship from the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence on Achieving the Tobacco Endgame (GNT1198301) . CG holds a NHMRC Grant (GNT1198301) and an ARC Future Fellowship (FT220100186) . KMo holds a NHMRC Synergy Grant (APP2019252) . VR is supported in part by funding from the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (Healthy Homes grant MAHHU0069-22) . KMa is supported by a University of Melbourne McKenzie Fellowship. SH holds a University of Melbourne Research in Training Program Scholarship, a Research Higher Degree Top-up Scholarship from the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence on Achieving the Tobacco Endgame, and a grant from the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence on Achieving the Tobacco Endgame, administered by the University of Queensland for research unrelated to this study. This paper is part of a special issue of the journal focusing on: 'Collaborative partnerships for prevention: health determinants, systems and impact'. The issue has been produced in partnership with the Collaboration for Enhanced Research Impact (CERI) , a joint initiative between The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre and National Health and Medical Research Council Centres of Research Excellence. The Prevention Centre is managed by the Sax Institute in collaboration with its funding partners.