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Letter

Prisoners and prison staff express increased support for prison smoking bans following implementation across Scotland: results from the Tobacco In Prisons study

Details

Citation

Sweeting H, Demou E, Brown A & Hunt K (2021) Prisoners and prison staff express increased support for prison smoking bans following implementation across Scotland: results from the Tobacco In Prisons study. Tobacco Control, 30 (5), pp. 597-598. https://doi.org/10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2020-055683

Abstract
First paragraph: Several jurisdictions have introduced prison smoking bans, responding to concerns around the health of people in custody (hereafter ¡®prisoner¡¯ for brevity) and staff, legal challenges and maintenance costs1 2. Fears of disorder following bans are often expressed in advance.3-5 Although generally unfounded,6 7 such fears may reduce the stakeholder support that is vital for successful implementation.8 A complete prisoner smoking ban (staff smoking was already banned) was introduced in all 15 Scottish prisons in November 2018, precipitating no significant incidents.9 It has been evaluated by the three-phase Tobacco In Prisons study (TIPs).3 4 10 TIPs Phase 1 occurred before the ban¡¯s announcement; Phase 2 following the announcement, but before policy implementation (during which rechargeable e-cigarettes became available to prisoners); and Phase 3 following implementation.

Notes
Output Type: Letter

Journal
Tobacco Control: Volume 30, Issue 5

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2021
Publication date online25/06/2020
Date accepted by journal14/05/2020
URL
ISSN0964-4563
eISSN1468-3318

People (2)

Ms Ashley Brown

Ms Ashley Brown

Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

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