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Tobacco-free policy reduces combustible tobacco byproduct on a large university campus.

Brett W GelinoAllyson R SalzerJoshua D HarsinGideon P NaudéShawn P GilroyDerek D Reed
Published in: Journal of applied behavior analysis (2022)
Policy drives community-level behavior change, so behavior analysts should aid empirical policy development. University campus regulation is a useful proxy for broader policy initiatives and thus is a convenient inroad for behavior analyst involvement. This paper examines behavior analytic contributions to the planning and evaluation of a university tobacco-free initiative. We provided resources and guidance throughout early planning, and we then evaluated faculty and student compliance via byproduct (e.g., cigarette butts) counts taken at four high-traffic sites (as flagged by preliminary surveying of campus faculty, staff, and students). Visual analysis and supplementary statistical testing support notions of (a) a meaningful and sustained reduction of combustible tobacco byproducts in all locations, and (b) a demonstrative example of behavior analytic involvement with university policy planning and evaluation.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • mental health
  • quality improvement
  • air pollution
  • medical education
  • drinking water
  • peripheral blood
  • high school