Egészségbiztonság Nemzeti Laboratórium(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00006) Támogató: NKFIH
Policies that reduce tobacco retail density to decrease tobacco use among the youth
are critical for the tobacco endgame. This paper reviews a Hungarian tobacco regulatory
measure, which, since 2013, has confined the sale of tobacco products exclusively
to so-called National Tobacco Shops, summarises the changes in the national tobacco
retail marketplace and reports on analyses of the impact of this intervention on illegal
sales to minors and adolescent smoking behaviour.We reviewed the available national
statistical data on the structure and dynamics of the tobacco retail market. Changes
in lifetime and current (past 30 days) use of cigarettes among Hungarian adolescents
aged 13-17 years were assessed using data from international youth surveys on health
behaviours collected in 2010-2020.Since the start of policy implementation, the density
of tobacco shops in Hungary decreased by 85%, from 4.1 to 0.6 per 1000 persons. The
prevalence of lifetime and current cigarette smoking among adolescents declined by
13-24 percentage points (pp) and by 4.8-15 pp, respectively. The rate of illegal sales
of tobacco products to minors decreased by 27.6 pp, although the prevalence of compensatory
access strategies, especially asking others to buy cigarettes for minors, increased.After
a significant decrease in the nationwide availability of licensed tobacco retailers,
Hungary experienced short-term reductions in youth smoking prevalence. However, the
sporadic implementation of complementary, evidence-based tobacco control strategies
might limit further declines in youth smoking initiation and tobacco product use.