Article

The impact of standardised tobacco packaging and warnings on relapse prevention: a longitudinal online survey in the UK

Details

Citation

Moodie C, Jones D & Best C (2025) The impact of standardised tobacco packaging and warnings on relapse prevention: a longitudinal online survey in the UK. Tobacco Control. https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/early/2025/07/28/tc-2024-059206; https://doi.org/10.1136/tc-2024-059206

Abstract
Introduction The aim of standardised tobacco packaging is to discourage uptake, encourage cessation, help people who previously smoked avoid relapse and reduce exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke. Despite the growing body of evaluative research on standardised packaging, no study has explored the impact, if any, on relapse. In the UK, standardised packaging was phased in between May 2016 and May 2017. Methods The Adult Tobacco Policy Survey is a longitudinal online survey with people who smoke and previously smoked in the UK, with one wave conducted pre-standardised packaging (2016) and three waves post-standardised packaging (2017, 2019, 2022). We explored whether the look of standardised packs, and the warnings on standardised packs, were considered to help prevent relapse. Results Across the three post-standardised packaging waves, around one-third (33.5%–35.9%) of people who previously smoked agreed that the look of packs helped them to stay quit at least a little (‘a little’ 14.8%–15.0%; ‘somewhat’ 9.8%–10.9%; ‘a lot’ 8.9%–10.0%), while almost a half (47.5%–49.3%) agreed that warning labels helped them stay quit at least a little (‘a little’ 17.0%–18.1%; ‘somewhat’ 13.1%–14.7%; ‘a lot’ 15.3%–17.6%). There were no significant changes across the post-standardised packaging waves. Women, participants below 40 years of age and those from non-white ethnic backgrounds were more likely to report that the packaging and the warnings helped them stay quit across the post-standardised packaging waves. Conclusions The findings provide support for a foundational, yet overlooked, role of standardised packaging, which is to help people who previously smoked to stay quit.

Journal
Tobacco Control

StatusPublished
FundersDepartment of Health, Cancer Research UK and Cancer Research UK
Publication date online31/07/2025
Date accepted by journal14/07/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37379
PublisherBMJ
Publisher URLhttps://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/…8/tc-2024-059206
ISSN0964-4563
eISSN1468-3318

People (2)

Dr Catherine Best

Dr Catherine Best

Associate Professor, Health Sciences Stirling

Professor Crawford Moodie

Professor Crawford Moodie

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

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