A Systematic Review of Neighborhood Disparities in Point-of-Sale Tobacco Marketing.

Category Systematic review
JournalAmerican journal of public health
Year 2015
We systematically reviewed evidence of disparities in tobacco marketing at tobacco retailers by sociodemographic neighborhood characteristics. We identified 43 relevant articles from 893 results of a systematic search in 10 databases updated May 28, 2014. We found 148 associations of marketing (price, placement, promotion, or product availability) with a neighborhood demographic of interest (socioeconomic disadvantage, race, ethnicity, and urbanicity). Neighborhoods with lower income have more tobacco marketing. There is more menthol marketing targeting urban neighborhoods and neighborhoods with more Black residents. Smokeless tobacco products are targeted more toward rural neighborhoods and neighborhoods with more White residents. Differences in store type partially explain these disparities. There are more inducements to start and continue smoking in lower-income neighborhoods and in neighborhoods with more Black residents. Retailer marketing may contribute to disparities in tobacco use. Clinicians should be aware of the pervasiveness of these environmental cues. (Am J Public Health. Published online ahead of print July 16, 2015: e1-e11. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2015.302777).
Epistemonikos ID: 46d675a77a7c119dcd06941d27939ce1c0f74ddb
First added on: Jul 18, 2015