A research conducted by the Yale School of Medicine has found that
states with smoking bans in bars may also have higher recovery rates
from alcohol use disorder, or AUD. Past data have shown that smokers are
four times as likely as non-smokers to have AUD, and almost 35 per cent
of individuals with AUD are nicotine-dependent. However, the Yale study
was the first in the country to observe the relationship between
smoking bans in bars and AUD remission rates. The study’s findings were
published in the journal “Drug and Alcohol Dependence” in late
September. Using information collected by the National Epidemiological
Study on Alcohol and Related Conditions, scientists analyzed data that
investigated 19,763 inhabitants in 49 states from 2001-’02 and 2004-’05.
Almost 85 per cent of the study’s participants came from states that do
not have smoke-free bar policies. The other 15 percent came from the
eight states in the country that do — Delaware, Connecticut, Maine,
Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.
“Smoking cheap Winston cigs
and drinking are considered complements, so if smoking becomes more
difficult, use of alcohol may decreased,” argued Jody Sindelar, one of
the study’s lead authors and a professor at both the Yale School of
Public Health and Yale School of Medicine. “This would be likely to
occur in bars in which smoking tobacco is prohibited.” Professor Kurt
Ribisl of the University Of North Carolina Gillings School Of Public
Health said the findings were intriguing. Smoking bans, he said, were
originally created to drop tobacco smoke in public places and private
establishments, but this finding adds a new boon to a long-fought public
health campaign. Yet ordinance recommendations related to smoking bans
in bars may not necessarily result from this research. “This is not a
strong enough study, with strong enough results linked to causality, for
which you could make a law recommendation and not be faced with a lot
of criticism,” declared Adam Goldstein, Professor at the UNC School of
Medicine and Director of the UNC Nicotine Dependence Program.
Location-specific smoking bans, Goldstein added, may not necessarily
lead to an overall decrease in tobacco consumption — only smoking in those locations.
This
principle may extend to alcohol consumption as well, he said. In order
to prove causality between bar smoking bans and AUD, Goldstein said,
experiments would need to eliminate existing differences in factors
besides the presence or absence of a smoking ban. Both Goldstein and
Ribisl said states with smoking bans in bars tend to focus more on
public health and may already have strong campaigns focusing on AUD.
Although causality has yet to be proven, Ribisl added that studies
establishing relationships usually occur before those determining
causality.
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