Publication

National survey of tobacco-related work with young people

Contents:Acknowledgements
Summary
1. Introduction
2. Aims and objectives
3. Method and sample
4. Strategies and approaches which underpin tobacco-related work with young people in Scotland
5. The scope and key areas of tobacco-related work with young people across Scotland
6. Scope of activity among nationally based organisations
7. Scope of tobacco-related work with young people across geographical areas of Scotland
8. Summary, discussion and conclusions
9. References

7. Scope of tobacco-related work with young people across geographical areas of Scotland

This section explores the scope of tobacco-related work with young people in greater detail than the earlier overview sections. It provides a geographical breakdown using NHS Board areas as a convenient unit and is illustrated by specific examples of activities indicating good practice.

Section 7.1 gives a geographical overview. The remaining sections cover each board area in order of number of respondents, and address prevention, cessation, enforcement and training. Examples of activities described by respondents are presented, largely using their own words. Cases were chosen as representing youth focussed approaches with a tobacco related aim or element. Projects with a broader base are also included if they address harder-to-reach and minority groups. Finally, many respondents reported No Smoking Day activities, but examples are only included here if they appear to encompass broader based activities rather than one-day awareness raising events.

Details of all the individual activities respondents have described are provided in a separately bound Appendix, grouped by geographical area and the key areas of prevention, cessation, enforcement and training. Finally, whilst the response rate of 62% was relatively high for a survey of this nature, it is acknowledged that there may be other relevant activities and interventions which are not reported here because of lack of data.

7.1 Geographical overview

The range of tobacco-related work with young people is summarised on a geographical basis in Table 7.1. Figures are presented as percentages to facilitate comparison but it is important to remember that the numbers are very small in some areas.

 

Table 7.1 Overview of specific aspects of work by location: NHS Board area (%)

Base: All respondents

 

Total


(210)

%

GG


(29)

%

A&C


(22)

%

Lothian


(19)

%

Lanark-
shire

(19)

%

Grampian


(19)

%

FV


(15)

%

Tayside


(16)

%

A&A


(12)

%

Highland


(8)

%

Borders


(8)

%

Fife


(7)

%

D&G


(6)

%

Islands


(8)

%

Prevention / education

69

69

64

74

84

63

60

94

67

75

38

86

83

63

10-20 years specifically

41

31

59

21

63

37

47

50

50

38

25

43

33

38

10-20 years potentially

28

38

5

53

21

26

13

44

17

38

13

43

50

25

Cessation

47

45

45

42

53

63

60

38

50

25

50

57

67

38

10-20 years specifically

25

10

41

16

16

32

40

19

42

25

13

29

33

13

10-20 years potentially

22

34

5

26

37

32

20

19

8

-

38

29

33

25

Enforcement

23

21

23

32

11

16

13

31

42

13

25

29

17

38

Training provision

In-house

20

17

14

21

26

37

13

13

25

-

25

29

33

13

For other agencies

10

3

5

16

16

11

20

-

8

13

-

14

33

25

Develop support materials

For internal use

14

14

18

11

16

11

-

25

25

-

-

14

-

38

For other agencies

9

14

9

11

5

5

13

6

8

-

-

-

-

13

Prevention and education activity across the NHS Board areas was broadly similar to the national overall total of 69% reporting this kind of work. However, relatively high proportions reported preventive activities in Tayside, Fife, Lanarkshire and Dumfries and Galloway (94%, 86%, 84% and 83% respectively) and a relatively lower proportion was recorded in Borders (38%). As with the national total, most areas recorded higher proportions of young people specific activities in comparison to more general activities which would potentially include 10-20 year olds. The preponderance of young people specific activities was highest in Argyll and Clyde, Lanarkshire, Forth Valley and Ayrshire and Arran, but the balance was reversed in Lothian, Dumfries and Galloway and Greater Glasgow.

Recording of cessation activities across the NHS Board areas tended to be closer to the national proportion of 47%. However, higher levels are particularly apparent in Dumfries and Galloway, Grampian and Forth Valley (67%, 63% and 60% respectively). Reported levels in Highland were relatively low. In identifying young people specific cessation interventions, the overall national experience is relatively equally divided between those targeted at young people and those potentially reaching 10-20 year olds, largely reflecting a more general focus among primary care respondents (25% : 22%). However, more positive ratios towards young people specific activities are notable in Highland, Argyll and Clyde, Ayrshire and Arran and Forth Valley. A relatively lower proportion of youth specific work was reported in Greater Glasgow, Borders, Lanarkshire and the Islands.

In relation to enforcement, recorded involvement is relatively higher than the total proportion of 23% in Ayrshire and Arran, the Islands and Lothian (42%, 38% and 32% respectively) and relatively lower in Lanarkshire, Forth Valley and Highland (11%, 13% and 13% respectively). Responses were received from nearly all trading standards departments, all of whom are involved in enforcement activities. Thus, variation in these proportions largely reflects the extent to which more than one local authority based department is included in an NHS Board area. An additional factor is the extent to which respondents from other agency types reported involvement in enforcement. In Argyll and Clyde, Lothian, Tayside, Ayrshire and Arran and Western Isles respondents from health promotion and/or primary care indicated involvement together with youth work agencies in Greater Glasgow, Borders and Fife.

As already discussed, provision of training was at a relatively low level overall (20% in-house and 10% provision for other agencies). Reporting of in-house training was relatively higher in Grampian and Dumfries and Galloway (37% and 33%) and provision of framing for other agencies was higher in Dumfries and Galloway, the Islands and Forth Valley (33%, 25% and 20% respectively).

Development of support materials was not a widespread activity. Development of materials for internal use were more likely to be reported in Tayside and Ayrshire and Arran (25% and 25% compared with 14% overall) largely reflecting activities in the youth sector. There was no reporting of this activity from four NHS Board areas. There was little variation from the overall reporting of 9% involvement in developing materials for other agencies, although this activity was not reported at all in four NHS Board areas.

7.2 Greater Glasgow NHS board area

Greater Glasgow NHS Board area encompasses a large urban area including extensive areas of deprivation. The main local authority is Glasgow City Council, but four other local authority areas overlap the boundaries. This area includes the largest number of respondents (29) reflecting its size.   

Table 7.8  Greater Glasgow NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

1

1

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

1

Primary Care

7

-

7

-

6

-

2

-

-

-

Trading Standards

4

-

1

-

-

4

-

-

1

1

Statutory Youth Work

6

3

1

2

-

1

2

1

3

1

Voluntary Sector

5

3

2

1

2

1

1

-

-

-

SIPs

3

1

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

Other

3

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-


Reported current involvement in prevention and cessation interventions focussed on young people is at a relatively low level in this area (Table 7.8). Health promotion activities are focused mainly on preventive work, but primary care respondents reported that they did not undertake youth specific work, although, as noted in Figure 7.8a, some were involved in school-based activities. Enforcement activities were reported by trading standards officers with additional involvement from two youth work agencies. Training provision was relatively low and only highlighted by youth work and primary care respondents.  Youth work was the main sector describing development of support materials, followed by the trading standards sector. 

 

Prevention and education

Relatively few individual prevention and education activities were outlined considering the size of Glasgow and many of these were one-off or short-term events.  Figure 7.8a outlines projects which are both smoking and youth specific, including No Smoking Day focussed activities, but also includes examples of smoking being addressed among other issues.  There are also indications of approaches which would encompass smaller and harder to reach target groups such as ethnic minority groups, young people with special needs, young homeless people, looked after/accommodated young people and those leaving care.

Cessation

As Figure 7.8b indicates, specific cessation projects were difficult to identify. The examples illustrate: a cessation group targeted at the local general population but including 16 and 17 year olds as well as 18+ years; group work activities exploring the issue of smoking; and information giving activities.  One case indicates youth worker activities located in school settings, and this was also reported by a different respondent in relation to prevention.

Enforcement

The enforcement activities outlined in Figure 7.8c are broadly similar to those in other areas, for example, routine inspection of premises to ensure warnings are displayed, visits to locations for vending machines and response to complaints.  Less commonly reported enforcement activities listed are:

  • use of press releases asking the public to give information on illegal sales
  • discussion on contraband cigarettes in the context of 'law and rights' reported by a youth worker
  • Community Action with shopkeepers and young people, reported by a voluntary sector respondent.

 

Training

The main source of training reported was the local Health Promotion Department - Smoking Concerns. Training from them addressed young people and smoking as well as general smoking cessation approaches. ASH and Fast Forward were also mentioned as sources of training on tobacco and young people, primarily by health promotion and primary care respondents. Within the youth work sector, training sources included Community Education, and Youth Health Spot, a local project, and the Jewish Youth Movement. In relation to training provision, one primary care respondent highlighted general cessation training for their staff members and one youth organisation reported tobacco training for their workers.  A voluntary sector respondent highlighted peer led health promotion training for homeless young people.

Figure 7.8a  Greater Glasgow NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Smokebusters Club

10-14 years

Any young people in age range

Includes schools, youth groups, looked after/accommodated young people and those with special needs, ethnic minority groups and community group attenders

Interactive club for non-smoking young people between 10-14 years

Competitions, newsletters, quiz, events

Mainly communicate with members via newsletter /

Education department

Running since 1983 Being reviewed

Questionnaires with members / parents to determine impact

Smoke Free Class

10-15 years

School students

 

Education department

Smoke Free Me

Primary 6 / Primary 7

In 20 schools: Feb-March 2001

Interactive drama for P6 / P7 - lesson plans to be completed prior to drama.  CD provided with songs

Lesson plans, CD, promotional materials?

Education department

Primary Care

Health Fayre

Local primary school (open day)

Pupils / families and teachers

Local primary school

Health checks and advice by HVs and practice nurses

Education / community education / school nurses

Youth Health Promotion

Youth group attenders

Discussed within context of health promoting activity

Ongoing

Statutory Youth Work

PSD classes

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders, young people with special needs, community group attenders

Informal education in classroom setting

1 day a week

Own packs /

Local information projects

Smoke-Free Fest

Youth group attenders

A disco event organised by local youth forum with no smoking message promoted

One-off event

Health board materials /

GGHB funding for event, police

Group work

12-25 years

Youth group attenders,

community group attenders

Issue based group discussions / exercises

Done weekly, 1-2 hours x 3-4 weeks

Publicity etc from GGHB, 'No Smoking Day' material

Voluntary Sector

No Smoking Day event “QUITS”

14-18 years

Youth group attenders

Made video based on HEBS advert

One evening, two afternoons

Video, collage, drama/

External funding from Health Promotion

Series of health and fitness activities for Asian young people

Ethnic minority groups

 

Instructors etc /

External funding from Health Promotion

Peer led health promotion training

Young homeless people

   

SIPs

Written information produced as part of a broader information resource

16-20 years

Looked after / accommodated teenagers, those leaving care

 

Social work

Planned Activity

Primary Care

 

Secondary school pupils

Health talks on smoking

 
   

12-19 years

Group set up within LHCC to address smoking - planned activity with young people to include consultation and service delivery

 

Statutory Youth Work

 

10-17 years

Education about the hazards of smoking and Jewish textual approach

 

 

Figure 7.8b  Greater Glasgow NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Statutory Youth Work

Project surgeries in schools

School students

Material and information given as requested to young people and teachers

Within school terms times

Smoking leaflets and helpline numbers

Voluntary Sector

Smoking Cessation Group

16-20+ years  (all ages)

Parents, community group attenders

This was done in an informal setting with people of all ages in the community taking part (12-15) per group.

6 weeks

Videos about quitting smoking, literature, acupuncturist, discussion and support from members of the group/

Homeopathic doctor/

Model based on a project in Easterhouse

Group work

10-15 years

Youth group attenders

Community group attenders

Group work on why young people smoke

Who smokes in your family?

Positives / negatives

(Organisation offers half price hypnotherapy for cessation)

Provide information  on stopping

School students, youth group attenders, young people with special needs, ethnic minority groups, community group attenders, wider community

Provide information at youth information stalls, satellite points etc

GGHB and HEBS leaflets, Smoking, how you can give up - Help your pregnant partner give up - posters, postcards and other information sources

Planned Activity

Health promotion

Cessation support

16-18 years

Development of services to include support for young people

 

Primary Care

Cessation

Young adults

Currently working on development of this work with colleagues from Smoking Concerns

 

 

Figure 7.8c  Greater Glasgow NHS Board area: enforcement

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Trading Standards

Retailing inspection

Shop keepers, management of pubs / clubs

Retailing inspection to ensure warnings displayed
Trader advice - serve written notice if warnings not displayed
As part of yearly inspection programme

Laminated signs supplied if requested

Routine enforcement - cigarette packs

Shop keepers, management of pubs / clubs, sellers / providers of illegal cigarettes

Check cigarettes packs have health warning as per labelling regulations
Officer visits as per enforcement schedule - ongoing

Customs and Excise

Routine inspection of premises
Responding to consultation documents on proposed advertising controls

10-15 years
Shopkeepers, management of pubs / clubs etc

Normal programmed visit to premises where cigarette vending machines are located

Customs and Excise

Seeking information on illegal sales (via local press)

10-15 years
Parents, teachers, youth / community group leaders

Press releases asking the public to let us know of retailers selling tobacco to young people
Periodic - last done November 1999

Police, local health issues group

Enforcement regarding consumer complaints

All complaints about illegal sales are investigated
Ad hoc - very few complaints received

Police

Statutory Youth Work

Law and rights

12-15 years
Young people, youth / community group leaders

Discussion on contraband cigarettes

Voluntary Sector

Community Action with shops and young people

10-15 years
Shop keepers, young people

No specific activity

Police (community safety)

Planned Activity

Trading Standards

Introduction of Proof of Age Card - 'Youth Card'

12-18 year olds

The Glasgow Young Scot Card suggested is multi-purpose - has significantly more uses than the proof of age aspect which might be seen negatively by some young people.

Card Joined with Young Scot organisation and obtained discounts from services/retailers in Glasgow, Scotland and Europe.

Proposed introduction to 40,000 12-18 year olds free of charge.
To be launched September 2001
Will hopefully continue to be developed over many years.

Worked with Young Scot, Scottish Executive, HEBS, police.

External funding from Scottish Executive and GGHB.

Retailer awareness

 

Enforce 'Tax Paid' labelling

Retailers

We would, if we had the resources, have a 4 pronged approach to enforcement.  The idea would be to raise shopkeepers' awareness of the offences, other than underage sales, they could commit.

Re legislation on:

  • Refillable gas lighter
  • Display of underage notice
  • Display of health warnings on packets
  • Display on packs of 'blue' tax paid label

From July 2001 trading standards can apply to enforce cigarettes having to bear 'Tax Paid' labelling and we intend to apply

Planned test purchasing

(enforcement > prevention)

10-15 years old

Retailers

Test purchase exercises using volunteer young people with strict protocol for all involved.  Awaiting decision of Lord Advocate who is presently reviewing his position on the use of such test purchases.

Information leaflets

Retailers

Produce information leaflets for retailers explaining their statutory responsibilities regarding a wide range of age restricted products  - by March 2002

7.3 Argyll and Clyde NHS board area

Argyll and Clyde covers a wide area with both densely populated and often less-well off urban communities and widely spread rural communities.  Reported activities indicated a relatively high level of inter-agency working, including, but not exclusively, the Inverclyde Tobacco Control Alliance, a grouping of community, primary care, local authority and health promotion agencies founded in 1995.

 

Table 7.2  Argyll and Clyde NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

1

1

-

1

-

1

1

1

-

-

Primary Care

2

2

-

1

1

-

-

-

-

-

Trading Standards

3

1

-

-

-

3

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

8

4

1

3

-

-

-

-

2

1

Voluntary Sector

3

2

-

2

-

-

-

-

-

-

SIPs

3

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

Other

2

2

-

1

-

-

2

-

2

1

As Table 7.2 indicates, there was a high level of involvement in prevention and cessation activities focused on young people across nearly all agency types.  Enforcement activities were mainly undertaken by trading standards respondents but the health promotion department and a youth training agency also reported involvement in this area.  Training was provided by health promotion and by other agencies - Have a Heart Paisley and Argyll Training - and support materials were developed within the youth work sector and these two agencies.


Prevention and education

As already noted, there were relatively high levels of involvement in young person specific activities.  Figure 7.2a illustrates substantive activities from across different agency types, in different settings and using different approaches, as well as the incorporation of No Smoking Day as a basis for broader activities.  Two projects are also included which highlight the development of websites with young people, addressing tobacco among a number of issues.


Cessation

The cessation initiatives outlined in Figure 7.2b illustrate multi-agency activity, school and youth work based initiatives, and give an example of No Smoking Day providing a basis for more in-depth activity over a 3-day period.  Planned cessation activities were reported primarily by the health promotion respondent, but developments in primary care and youth and community based work were also outlined.


Enforcement

In relation to enforcement a range of activities were reported.  Work by trading standards officers reflected similar initiatives undertaken across the country including:

  • investigating complaints in response to reports of retailers selling tobacco in contravention of legislation
  • routine inspections of trade premises / shops
  • education of traders on underage sales (often in the course of routine visits)
  • surveillance of premises selling tobacco products
  • investigating sales of single cigarettes (including attempted purchase)
  • ensuring signs indicating no sales to under-16s are displayed.

In addition, trading standards respondents reported:

  • the planned introduction of a Proof of Age card
  • the Young Scot 'Smart Card' which also incorporates identity information - in order to control sale of age restricted products, particularly tobacco
  • supplying intelligence to Customs and Excise gained from sources.

The health promotion respondent also reported involvement in enforcement by participating in the multi-agency Tobacco Steering Group which is also attended by a Trading Standards representative.  One training agency worker reported including awareness of the tobacco industry and contraband as part of a three day programme centred around No Smoking Day.


Training

A minority of youth workers (four) reported receiving tobacco-related training from health promotion / health board sources often focussing on No Smoking Day. The health promotion respondent reported receiving training from Fast Forward on smoking cessation and youth smoking culture. Smoking cessation specific training was provided by health promotion to youth and community workers and schools nurses, giving training in negotiating behaviour skills with a one day introduction followed by a two day education course. The health promotion department also held a one day conference / seminar focussing on issues for young people, women and disadvantaged communities in giving up smoking which was aimed at all workers interested in smoking cessation.  Additionally, tobacco issues were included in a general session on health issues for young people. Finally a worker in a training agency reported incorporating tobacco issues in courses for young people, including peer education training, the history of tobacco, poster design and raising awareness.


Figure 7.2a  Argyll and Clyde NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Supporting school nurses and youth workers in addressing tobacco issues

10-15 years / School students /youth group attenders

Support with project design and activity resources, consultancy, particularly around No Smoking Day

NSD materials and other HP resources on tobacco health, eg. GASP

Development of website

School, FE/HE students, youth group attenders, looked after / accommodated teenagers, young people with special needs / ethnic minority groups, wider community

Tobacco input developed for Inverclyde Youth Website.  Multi-agency project developed through SAD funding November 2000 - ongoing

General resources on tobacco used in development of site / Community police, Inverclyde Council, Youth committee, NHS Funding: SAD

Primary Care

Talks/discussions with 10-13 year olds in school

10-15 years / School students

School nurses give talks/discussions with 10-13 year olds in school

School nurses

Prevention in schools

14-17 years / School students

Campaigns / presentations in primary and secondary schools

HEBS materials / Schools

Trading Standards

Youth seminar

10-20 years / School students, youth group attenders

Organising youth seminar to discuss issues

Health Promotion Unit, Strathclyde Police

Statutory Youth Work

Website development General café programme (We also promote positive lifestyles through non-computing programmes, eg. Duke of Edinburgh's Award)

10-20 years / School/FE/HE students, looked after / accommodated teens, young people with special needs, ethnic minority groups

The Log-in website includes health related information including tobacco issues. (Includes Doc- online service linked to local GP practice - GPs answer queries) The website was developed in February 1999 and continues

www. soft-ware Looked at other websites and later chose suitable link sites Local Health Centre through Doc-online

No Smoking Day

10-20 years / School/FE/HE students, looked after / accommodated teens, young people with special needs, ethnic minority groups

A week long programme of anti-smoking activities, quizzes, prizes,  fun activities

HEBS promotional materials / Health Board

School leavers' courses for 4th and 5th years

School students, youth group attenders

Discussion, group work based on Kiss It Goodbye photocopy kit

ASH website

Voluntary Sector

Short sketch (Drama / Peer education)

12-20 years / Youth group attenders

Sketch written by young person in group will be performed by a group of young people to others June - September 2001

Funding: Inverclyde Tobacco Initiative

Smokes and Ladders game

10-15 years / School students, youth group attenders

Game based on Snakes and Ladders taken around various youth centres locally

White sheet, dice made from box and giveaways - pens etc. Idea for game from HEBS

SIPs

'Just Say No' Drama workshop

10-15 years / School students, youth group attenders, looked after / accommodated teenagers

Drama workshop. This is mostly done with young people in primary school to equip them with the confidence to say no in a real situation

Young people are put into pairs, one is offering a cigarette and the other has to practice different ways of saying 'no' (Youth Health Worker)

Training Centre

Collage (Influence of media)

16-20 years / Training centre attenders; Looked after / accommodated teenagers, young people with special needs

1 day workshop looking at how the media encourages/influences our choices

Magazines, videos, HEBS material

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Drama based activity

School children

Have a Heart Paisley Demonstration Project is working with school through drama based activity Winter 2001 - Summer 2002

(Potentially cessation also)

Have a Heart Paisley

Interactive theatre

Primary school children (P6 and P7)

Interactive theatre production incorporating 4 lesson plans covering history of smoking, tobacco advertising, effects of smoking, general information. January to March 2002

 

Have a Heart Paisley

Young person's conference (working party exploring the issues)

School students (S3 repeated in S4)

Currently organising a working group to look at some of the issues and in the autumn will be organising a young person's conference (S3 to be repeated when they are in S4).  This conference will be to consult and discuss with young people their attitudes and lifestyles around 3 main factors of heart disease (smoking, healthy eating and physical activity)

 

Training Centre

Campaigning and lobbying

Young people

Working with young people using material from ASH. November/December 1 week

 

 

Figure 7.2b Argyll and Clyde NHS Board: cessation

Role

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Inverclyde Tobacco Initiative

12-24 years Youth group attenders

Youth Council involved in year long project to support young people to quit smoking March 2000 - March 2001

Stop smoking leaflets - HEBS / Youth Council, Community group, primary care

Primary care

Smoking Cessation Support Clinic

16-20 years GP practice population

Individual counselling and support available +/- Zyban or NRT.  Would be available to 16-20 year olds but not planned specifically for them

HEBS and Health Promotion Dept

Statutory Youth Work

Pupil Support Project (Alternatives to Exclusion)

10-15 years School students

Brief discussion on cost, health issues, patterns of smoking time/breaks and reason why started. Ongoing as opportunity arises over past 18 months

School (pupil support project co-ordinator)

Voluntary Sector

Stop Smoking Support Group (Pilot)

10-20 years Youth group attenders Wider community

Developing support group for young women.  Highlighting alternative activities, eg. exercise, aromatherapy September - November 2000

HPU, aromatherapist, Second Chance Learning, Council's sport section / Funding: Health Promotion

Recruiting Smokers Who Wish to Stop

10-20 years School students

Talking to high school pupils to encourage group support, recruiting through local newspaper, organizing information day for young parents. June 2001

Dietician, community health project, high school, financial advisors / Funding: Health Promotion

Training Centre

No Smoking Day

16-20 years Training centre attenders, looked after / accommodated teenagers, young people with special needs

Combined with prevention and education 3 days

 

Planned Activity

Health promotion

The Zone Youth
Drop-in

Local young people

Health Centre to undertake a cessation project with local young people - to be offered group support and alternative therapies. Sept 2001 - April 2002

 

Awareness raising

Those working with young people

Plan to raise awareness and educate people working with young people in order to support opportunistic interventions - education, motivation, sign-posting to helping agencies. Autumn 2001 -

(Potentially also prevention)

Training in Tobacco Issues for Youth Workers being planned

Youth Workers

Training needs assessment currently disseminated. Training to be developed in response. Based on results of 'Community Based Approaches to Tobacco Control' (Inverclyde Tobacco Initiative). Autumn 2001

 

Primary care

Needs assessment / training needs

Young people and pregnant women

Needs assessment being carried out.  Also training needs analysis. Smoking cessation counsellor coming into post in LHCC. June 2001-?

 

7.4 Lothian NHS board area

Lothian NHS Board area encompasses the second largest city in Scotland, together with three other local authority areas with a mix of urban and rural communities.  A broad range of socio-economic groupings is found, from well-off communities to extensive areas of deprivation.  Reports indicated individual areas with relatively high levels of tobacco-specific and interagency working, including the 'Breathing Space' project in the Wester Hailes and West Lothian Tobacco Issues Group.


Table 7.12  Lothian NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

1

-

1

-

1

-

-

1

-

1

Primary Care

4

1

3

1

3

1

1

1

1

-

Trading Standards

3

-

-

-

-

3

1

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

4

-

4

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

4

3

1

2

-

1

1

1

1

1

SIPs

2

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Other

1

-

1

-

1

-

1

-

-

-

Across Lothian, reported involvement in youth specific prevention and cessation activities is at a relatively low level, although a higher proportion reported broader based activities, especially in relation to prevention (Table 7.12).  As well as trading standards respondents, involvement in enforcement activities was also reported by primary care, voluntary sector and SIP respondents.  Training activities were reported by low numbers but across a range of agency types.  Development of support materials was reported by health promotion, primary care and voluntary sector respondents.

 

Prevention and education

A relatively high number of projects were selected for inclusion in Figure 7.12a, to convey the varied nature of activities. Interventions are largely young people and tobacco focussed but also show examples of addressing smoking in the context of broader issues such as drugs awareness and healthy living.  Examples are given where individuals undertake different activities in different settings rather than a single focus.  Looked after/accommodated teenagers are highlighted as a target group in one project.  The final example, although not youth specific, highlights the development of a workplace tobacco policy, which would have an impact on young people.

Planned prevention activities were reported by a range of agency types and again suggest considerable cross-agency working.

 

Cessation

A number of substantive projects addressing smoking cessation and young people are illustrated in Figure 7.12b. Activities are located in a variety of settings; primary care, community schools (primary care), secondary schools (voluntary sector) and youth work (both voluntary sector and primary care respondents).


Enforcement

In addition to routine activities similar to those already described in other areas, such as routine visits and investigation of complaints, the following activities were identified by different trading standards officers:

  • schools talks, discussing age-related sales, 2-3 times a year
  • survey of young people at school into smoking habits etc. - questionnaire developed in-house (Spring/Summer 2000)
  • one-off letter to secondary school head teachers advising of the remit of trading standards re. tobacco
  • planning a press campaign on under-age smoking.

In addition, a worker from the voluntary sector reported participation in the ASH working group on 'Tobacco Taxation and Smuggling in Scotland' as well as local ongoing lobbying and awareness raising exercises. 

 

Training

Tobacco-related training was received by seven respondents.  The most commonly mentioned source was the local health board/health promotion department, with training addressing general cessation, tobacco awareness and 'prevention through participation' (reported by health promotion, primary care and SIP respondents).  Other sources included HEBS and ASH Scotland, the West Lothian Drug and Alcohol Service and the Ulster Cancer Foundation.  A trading standards respondent highlighted training from the Trading Standards Institute on 'children's and young persons' protection from tobacco'.

Provision of training reported by health promotion and primary care primarily addressed brief intervention and in-depth smoking cessation interventions for health professionals, although this would be targeted at the general practice population rather than young people.  Remaining training reported was by a tobacco issues worker in the voluntary sector who outlined annual contact with primary school teachers, which included updating their knowledge about tobacco use and developing skills in tobacco education and use of a resource pack.


Figure 7.12a  Lothian NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Primary Care

Summer group to develop internet site

Secondary school age

School students

Group of 4-6 local young people involved in competing to develop a site

1 week

Health information / promotion and IT

Raising awareness

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders, wider community

Postcards/posters distributed to all households

Postcards / posters

Community Health Agency / Health Board

Poster competition

10-20 years

School students

Wider community

All local schools invited to participate: Prize giving at  Scottish Parliament

January-March 2001

No Smoking Day materials used as base / Education Department, voluntary sector

Funding: Local authority

Local 'TIG Talk' magazine

(Tobacco Issues Group)

 

Magazine circulated to all West Lothian Homes: word search competition

January-March 2001

 

Local Authority, voluntary sector

Statutory Youth Work

Breathing Space

10-15 years

Youth group attenders

Grant allocation to work with young people re issues around smoking resulting in the production of publicity materials for/target at other young people

10 week programme

Posters, postcards, video / Breathing Space, Wester Hailes Health Agency, WHALE

Funding: Breathing Space

West Highland Walkway

16-20 years

Youth group attenders

Used this as medium to discuss issues around smoking etc

Part of overall fitness/health programme

16 weeks (still ongoing)

Peer group, examples, HEBS materials, re. facts etc

Funding: Woods / Grants / Breathing Space

Group work

10-15 years

Youth group attenders

Allow young people to absorb information and determine a way of illustrating that work to others, i.e. video, painting, photographs

Oct 2000 - Sept 2001

Video-making chosen by group /

Y2K, Schools Out, Young Mums

Funding: ASH Projects

Drugs Awareness Road show

10-20 years

School FE/HE students

Using music as the medium for getting the messages across about drug use including smoking.

5 week period covering secondary schools and local college

Nov-Dec 2000

National materials, local drug and alcohol project, 'The Score Facts About Drugs' /

Scotland Against Drugs, West Lothian Drug and Alcohol Programme

Funding:

Scotland Against Drugs

Healthy living workshops (youth club based)

10-15

Youth group attenders

Workshops, peer education

Rolling programme of 4 week inputs

HEBS, materials, and ASH and local materials

Mainstream youth club provisions

10-15 years

Youth group attenders

Ongoing healthy living, discouraging smoking in clubs

One/one and group work

 

Voluntary sector

Prevention materials

10-20 years

Youth group attenders

Looked after / accommodated teenagers

Leaflets from Lothian Health and posters

Leaflets from Lothian health and posters

Prevention and education Primary 6 or Primary 7

Primary 6 /7

School students, teachers

Group work discussion based approach carried out over 2 weeks.  Factual, covering decision making and skills approach

Carried out throughout year

Video - flip chart, smoking machine, cigarettes, leaflets (programme and leaflets submitted) /

Education services

'Girls 4 Health' - video

 

Young girls group initially established to have health discussions, grow into making video highlighting needs of young people, both in health and resource forms

Video/group work

2 ½ years started early 1999

Video/group work /

Community education, primary health care staff, voluntary organisations

Youth work

10-20 years

Youth group attenders, FE/HE students, parents, community group attenders, youth leaders

Informal discussion based work with informal settings.  Group work, fun, fast and very interactive

Flip chart, pens, CO monitor, leaflets /

Community education, staff

(West Lothian Council, Occupational Health

Review and Audit of Tobacco Policy

Work place

Review and Audit of the Tobacco Policy 'Control of Tobacco at Work' resulted in the development and implementation of the Council Extended Policy (copy submitted).  This addresses wider tobacco issues (West Lothian Council Tobacco Policy Group).

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Needs assessment

Young people (through school nursing, community education, primary care etc)

Meetings with school nursing, community education etc to revisit a feasible and potential way forward for targeting smoking interventions specifically at young people (as opposed to them being only potentially included in smoking cessation work)

January-March 2002

 

Training

Workers with young people - especially primary school age (through school nursing etc)

Depends on results of needs assessment (above).  Training workers to provide smoking prevention sessions for younger children (may not happen if needs assessment suggests it's not the appropriate way forward)

April 2002 onwards

 

Primary Care

Small grants scheme

 

To encourage community development approach to tobacco issues with young people

 

Trading Standards

Press campaign on under age smoking

Young people

(see Enforcement below)

 

Voluntary Sector

Electronic based activities

Young people's unit staff

Electronic based activities, eg. internet

Work with Young People's Unit staff - current and planned

 

SIP

 

Primary 6/7 and Secondary 1/2 school children

Development of early intervention support project

Autumn 2001

 


Figure 7.12b  Lothian NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Primary care

Cessation support

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders

Wider community

(Priority given to cardio-pulmonary disease / pregnancy)

Individual and group: motivational interviews followed by counselling

6-8 weeks

Training / supporting counsellors

Community Health Agency / Health Board

Community schools

10-15 years

School students, parents, teachers

Young people with special needs

Advice re smoking cessation Awareness raising competitions

Education, health care staff, voluntary sector

Smoking cessation with young women

16-23 years

Community group attenders

(young women)

Local community group for young women of 16-23 years old; group work smoking cessation

Education, health care staff, voluntary sector

 

Voluntary Sector

Workshops on giving up smoking

10-20 years

Youth group attenders, looked after / accommodated children

Identifying motives to stop and set targets

From leaflets

Youth Setting Cessation group

(Community Centre)

10-15 years

youth group attenders

Cessation group with young girls (friends),

Evening group, requested by group.

16th July 01 start date

Developmental /

Community education

 

School Based Cessation Group

10-15 years

School students

Group Work approach to cessation, tobacco reduction.  Experiential, topic based and group driven.

8 weeks, March 2000

Flip charts, various leaflets, CO monitor

Young People Research / Needs Assessment

10-20 years

School students

Questionnaire format for pupils from S1 to S6 in 2 secondary schools in West Lothian

Supported completion Confidential.

2000-2001

Education services

Planned Activity

Health promotion

Needs assessment

 

Revisit way forward for targeting smoking interventions specifically at young people.

January-March 2002

(see Figure 7.12a)

 

Training

Workers with young people

Training workers to provide smoking cessation interventions for young people (specifically targeted for them as opposed to there being only potentially included in current smoking cessation work)

Young people  focussed - especially  secondary school age (through school nursing,  community education etc)

Depends on outcome of Needs assessment.

  April 2002 onwards

 

Primary Care

Evaluating health needs

Young people

Developing strategy for evaluating health needs of local young people

Assume at this point that smoking will be one area to be addressed

 

7.5 Lanarkshire NHS board area

The Lanarkshire NHS Board area has a predominantly urban population, although there are considerable rural areas to the South.  There are extensive areas of industrial decline and socio-economic deprivation, mixed with new housing and modern industrial development.


Table 7.11  Lanarkshire NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion /
Health Board

1

1

-

-

-

-

1

1

1

-

Primary Care

4

3

1

-

1

-

1

-

1

-

Trading Standards

2

             -

-

-

1

2

1

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

9

7

2

3

3

-

2

2

1

1

Voluntary Sector

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

SIPs

2

1

-

-

2

-

-

-

-

-

Other

-

Table 7.11 suggests a relatively high level of tobacco-related work focussed specifically on young people in Lanarkshire, especially in the area of prevention.  Youth targeted cessation work was at a lower level, but other respondents, including trading standards respondents, reported activities which could potentially encompass young people.  Training was provided across a number of agencies and health promotion, primary care and youth work respondents reported the development of support materials.

 

Prevention

Activities highlighted in Figure 7.11a illustrate discrete projects such as Smokebusters and broader based workshop and discussion approaches addressing prevention issues.  An example is given of workers in the primary care context being involved in different settings: schools, workplace and youth groups.  Finally the process of organisational development towards health promoting schools and the related smoking policy is reported by a SIP respondent.

In addition to the projects listed here, a number of youth work agencies also described work in the context of healthy lifestyles and drugs-related initiatives that was not specifically focused on smoking, as well as more general awareness raising and information giving activities and discussions.  No Smoking Day activities were also highlighted. 

The only planned prevention activities reported were described by the health promotion respondent.

 

Cessation

A limited number of youth-related and cessation-specific projects were reported, although projects aimed at the general public were mentioned more frequently.  As Figure 7.11b shows, one project was aimed at young people (25 years and under) in 'harder to reach' groups.


Enforcement

In addition to routine activities reported in this area such as visits ensuring compliance and advising on legislation, one respondent described the following:

  • preparation of the Youth Empowerment Scheme, the embryonic stages of a Proof of Age card
  • joint surveillance with police of shops near schools after receipt of complaints
  • letter to the Crown Office supporting changing to current limits on use of children in test purchase programmes.

No other agencies described involvement with enforcement issues.

 

Training

Eleven respondents reported receiving related training.  Primary care respondents and three youth workers had received training from the health promotion department addressing prevention and tobacco awareness; the health promotion respondent and a youth work respondent had attended Fast Forward and HEBS/ASH seminars; and a trading standards respondent reported input from the Trading Standards Institute addressing enforcement and from ASH Scotland covering tobacco awareness. In relation to training provision, the health promotion respondent reported providing training for youth workers, which addressed attitudes to smoking, influencing factors and helping young people to stop.  A trading standards respondent reported in-house training on the difficulties in using children for test purchasing purposes.

 

Figure 7.11a  Lanarkshire NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Smokebusters project

 

8 years >

Primary 5 - Primary 7

School students

Classes (P5 - P7) are asked to register to work towards becoming a Smokebusting classroom

Ongoing

Smokebusting pack. Various smoking related activities (linked to school curriculum).

Forth Valley HB developed the pack and it was localised for use in Lanarkshire with their permission /

Education Department

Primary Care

School involvement as part of health board education package

10-15 years

School students

Talks/workshops, materials

Ongoing over the school term

ASH/HEBS materials, leaflets

Workplace lifestyle screening

16-20 years

Workplace

One to one counselling

6 weeks duration

Information sharing, leaflets, videos

Lifestyle education within Universal Connections

10-20 years

Youth group attenders

Discussions concentrated over 6 weeks programme

Videos, leaflets

Art competition

Awareness raising

16-20 years

School students, parents, teachers

Art competition within primary schools to design poster.  Print successful entry for display across area

Spring term 1999

Education Department / Teachers

Statutory Youth Work

Smoking workshops / demonstrations

10-20 years

Youth group attenders

Workshops

Various one off sessions with local youth groups

Use of Smokerlyser and  mechanical smoker, quizzes, discussions backed up with support materials and leaflets

Funding from SIP

Discussions

 

10-20 years

Youth group attenders

As part of wider health issues included in youth work curriculum.  Focus changes but smoking related issued covered

Badges, posters etc / Local health authority

Smoking workshops

 

12-16 years

Youth group attenders

..

14-15 years

School students

Group work - discussion

One-off session

One 2 hour session

Topic arose as part of an informal discussion with youth group

Leaflets from health promotion department

Awareness raising smoking workshop

 

12-18 years

Youth group attenders

Workshop - Various activities related to raising awareness of effects of smoking: 'Frankenstein's Monster', 'Alien' and other related activities

2 hours

Junk materials; handouts; skill base of workers

Voluntary Sector

Giving information and advice

14-25 years

All young people 14-25 years

Information and advice giving on smoking as part of our general service when requested

On-going

Smokeline cards, ASH leaflets and other publications

SIP

Health promoting schools

 

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders, parents, teachers

Organisational development within schools - smoking policy dev - talks

1999 - 2002

Health promotion materials /

Lanarkshire Health Promotion, South Lanarkshire Council

Funding: Lanarkshire Health Board (and SIP)

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

The Youth Smoking Project

12-14 year olds

School students

Youth workers, school nurses

This is a new project this current financial year.  It is split into 3 areas:

1. Smokefree class

Prevention and cessation

First and second year pupils (12-14 years old)

Classes are asked to sign up to the scheme and remain smokefree for 6 months.  Monthly inputs consisting of group work and CO-monitoring is provided

Ongoing

2. Training

Prevention and cessation

Youth workers, school nurses

3. Pilot Smoking Cessation Service

(see below in cessation section)


Figure 7.11b  Lanarkshire NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Primary Care

Schools programme smoking cessation advice.

leading up to No Smoking Day

12-17 years

School students

Talks, videos, poster competition Leading up to No Smoking Day.  1-2 weeks prior for poster competition

Talks, videos, poster competition

Statutory Youth Work

Self help groups, doctor referrals, patches

SIP funded projects

All SIP residents

Health Workers, local community work staff

3-6 month period

Funding: SIP and Health Board

SIP

Tackling addiction

25 years and under

Looked after / accommodated teenagers, young people with special needs

NRT and counselling via co-ordinator within primary care

2000-2002

NRT /

Primary Care Trust, Pharmacy / Funding: PCT and SIP

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Pilot Cessation Group -

The Youth Smoking Project:

Secondary school age

This  is a new project this current financial year

It is split into 3 areas: Training and Smokefree classes are outlined above (Table 17.11a)

Pilot Smoking Cessation Service

Secondary school age up to 20 (not confirmed as yet)

Setting up of a cessation group for young people wanting to give up.  Linking with adult service currently being set up within a SIP area (see next box)

At planning stage

 

Statutory Youth Work

Youth facility users (12+years)

School groups (13-15years)

Involved in focus group run by ASH looking at potential projects based on their young women's group pilot

First meeting August/September 2001

   
 

11-16 years

Video making about smoking (actual content still to be decided)

8 weeks

 

Smoking cessation service

Priority - under 25's or those in households with children

Residents of the SIP

Smoking cessation service including advice support and treatment, training of local people, linking with schools, young people and workers

3 years - September 2001 - March 2004

 

7.6 Grampian NHS board area

The Grampian NHS Board area encompasses the fourth largest city in Scotland, as well as coastal towns and inland rural areas with scattered populations.  There are three local authority areas.

Table 7.9  Grampian NHS Board area:  overview

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion /
Health Board

1

1

-

1

-

-

1

1

1

1

Primary Care

3

1

1

1

2

-

1

-

-

-

Trading Standards

3

-

-

-

-

3

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

8

3

3

3

4

-

3

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

2

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

1

-

SIPs

1

1

-

1

-

-

1

1

-

-

Other

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Involvement in youth specific prevention and cessation activities was reported across most agency types (Table 7.9), with more general approaches also reported.  Involvement in enforcement was only reported by trading standards respondents.  Related in-house training provision was reported by most agency types but development of support materials was reported by health promotion and voluntary sector respondents only.

 

Prevention

A number of substantive interventions are outlined in Figure 7.9a, representing the majority of activities reported altogether, apart from additional No Smoking Day events.  Projects cover work in schools, including primary schools, and in youth group settings and include No Smoking Day activities focussed on young people and youth workers.


Cessation

As with prevention, substantive youth cessation projects were reported (Figure 7.9b).  Health promotion described cessation services targeted at the 16+ year old age group and a pilot project in school settings. A project described by a statutory youth work respondent took a broader approach in exploring smoking, undertaken in conjunction with health promotion and ASH Scotland. A No Smoking Day activity is included because of attendance by a cessation counsellor.

 

Enforcement

Trading standards officers were the only respondents recording involvement in enforcement in this area.  In addition to routine inspections and response to complaints about alleged illegal sales to under-16s already described in other areas, respondents also mentioned:

  • media activity, giving press releases and responding to media enquiries
  • monitoring of use of tobacco vending machines, especially in premises in the vicinity of schools, mentioned by one respondent
  • checks of refusals registers which show where and when an attempt purchase is stopped when staff are not sure of the age of the customer

In relation to planned activity, one respondent highlighted a planned series of test purchase programmes as a means of gathering evidence for reports to the Procurator Fiscal, but recognised this is currently not available to Scottish local authorities.

 

Training

Twelve of the 19 respondents from this area outlined training they had received.  The health promotion department was the main source of training, reported across primary care, youth work and SIP respondents, with some also mentioning joint training with the Great Northern Partnership. The health promotion respondent and one primary care respondent also reported receiving training from Fast Forward and HEBS and ASH Scotland. Topics addressed included smoking cessation, prevention, tobacco-awareness and No Smoking Day.  Reflecting the above picture, the health promotion respondent reported offering smoking cessation training for community education and voluntary sector workers and health service staff, together with tobacco awareness training for community education workers. However, one youth work respondent commented that ‘we do not separate tobacco from other drugs and offer our youth workers training in a more wide-ranging way’.  Another commented that ‘informally, full-time workers can train, encourage and support part-time staff on this issue’.


Figure 7.9a  Grampian NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Kids in Condition Session

8-11 years

Primary schools

Tobacco workshop for primary school aged children

Ongoing

Smoke free shopper, Smoke free me.  GASP stickers / bookmarks / Project tobacco leaflet etc /

Primary schools

No Smoking Day Campaigns 2000/2001

10-15 years

School, FE / HE  students, youth group attenders, workplace, parents, teachers,, community group attenders, wider community

Specific focus on young people in tobacco industry school work.  Workshops / support for youth work tobacco focus

Feb - April 2000, Jan - March 2001

(Evidence includes: PR in the playground, Florida Truth Campaign, Smoke Free Kids)

Cigarettes, I quit, A4 Velcro poster / NSD materials / Gasp: Smoke out / Breakfree teachers pack

Agencies:  Community Education, Education Department , Secondary Care, Workplace, Primary Care

Primary Care

Teen clinic

School students

½ hour appointment for each child where discussion re. health issues.

Ongoing

Community Education

Primary schools as part of  curriculum

Primary school students

Utilising materials from health promotion

Models, charts, hand-outs /

Education

Part of Social Education in Secondary schools

10-18 years

Secondary schools students

Discussion, questions, video, demonstration

(also part of school nurse role when doing medicals)

Video, Smokerlyser, carbon monoxide monitor /

Education

Teen group

12-16 years

Group of professionals GPx2, HV, HP rep, LC rep, 2 school nurses, 1 guidance teacher, 2 teenagers

April 2000 - ongoing (still to tackle smoking)

Writing local leaflets with information advice

Statutory Youth Work

 

Group Youth Work

Tobacco Awareness

10-15 years

Youth group attenders

Tobacco Awareness Discussions

ongoing

Leaflets, staff experience

No Smoking Day activity

14-26 years

School, FE / HE  students, youth group attenders, workplace, ethnic minority groups, community group attenders, wider community

No smoking in the building, handout for young people and their families, cessation counsellor

On the day

No Smoking Day pack

/ Local Child and Family Centre

Voluntary Sector

Exercise games - quizzes - puzzles

10-15 years

youth group attenders

Using above games to show the risks of smoking and costs of smoking

Smokerlyser - giant cigarette - model of human organs damaged - pictures and prices of attractive possessions

SIP (1)

Smoking Awareness Session

10-20 year olds

youth group attenders, community group attenders

Quizzes to gauge knowledge

1-2 hours

Smokerlyser - breathing equipment to test level of smoking /

Health Promotions / SIP

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.

 

Figure 7.9b  Grampian NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Smoking Advice Service (Cessation) (SAS) 16+ years
FE / HE  students, workplace, parents, teachers, looked after / accommodated teenagers, ethnic minority groups, community group attenders, wider community

Service targeted at 16 plus.  Referred or self-referred.

Jan 2000 - ongoing

A4 leaflets / info sheets / smoking cessation literature

Agencies:

Health professionals, community education, voluntary

Smoking Advice Service for young people aged 11-18

11-18 years

School students

Cessation service for young people

Pilot in schools in one Local Authority area.

Self selected programme of 6 weeks.

January 2001 - June 2001

(Evidence includes: Review of smoking cessation and young people, Health Canada, S/C pilot, University of Texas, Adolescent smoking cessation Ulster Cancer Foundation)

A4 information sheets, fags and hash leaflet / Cancer: Comic Co. leaflet plus others.

Agencies:

Education Department / schools

Funding: Grampian Heart Campaign and HIF

Mobile information bus

12-18 years

No specific target among young  people

Covers rural areas working with local youth teams on a range of health issues

6 months in each LA area

Varied

Agencies:

Youth work, community education

Statutory Youth Work

Discussion Group

Keep Fit / Gym

Beauty Therapy

14-20 years

Teenage Mums

Discussion group with input about cost and effects of smoking

Attending gymnasium to tone up body

Facials, manicures, hair care - how smoking affects appearance

Provided by Health Promotion

Funding: ASH / Health Promotion

Cessation counselling

(No Smoking Day)

14-26 years

School, FE / HE  students, workplace, parents, ethnic minority groups, community group attenders, wider community

Counsellor at project on No Smoking Day

One day

No Smoking Day materials, posters, flyers, smelly jars etc

Health Promotions, Great Northern Partnership

SIP

Cessation Workshop

(Pilot)

10-20 year olds

Youth group attenders, community group attenders

Cessation workshop adapted to suit young people.

Breaking up cigarette.  List of chemicals in cigarettes.  Methods on how to stop. Chilled vegetable as alternatives.

1-2 hour

Follow-up workshop

To check if have continued to stop smoking

1-2 hours

Tar Jar, Giant cigarettes with chemicals.  Tick sheets re. cravings and all aspects of smoking

Health Promotions / SIP

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Tobacco training including smoking cessation component

Youth, teaching staff

Training will be offered as two 3 hour sessions, first session covers tobacco issues, and second session is about smoking cessation.

Offered one session every 2 months

 

Primary Care

Drop-in centre

Young people

Looking to work with other 3 LHCCs across city to open drop-in centre for city wide population of young people (Register of 12-16 year olds in LHCC - 3,466 )

Writing information leaflets from working group

 

Voluntary Sector

Youth Cafes and Drop-ins

Young people

Work with young people in Youth Cafes and Drop-ins

 

7.7 Forth Valley NHS board area

Forth Valley NHS Board area is centrally situated, with substantial towns and smaller rural hinterlands.  There are three local authorities within the area.

Table 7.7 Forth Valley NHS Board area:  overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

 
 

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

3

2

-

1

2

-

1

3

-

1

Primary Care

2

1

1

-

1

-

1

-

-

-

Trading Standards

2

-

-

-

-

2

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

5

1

1

2

-

-

-

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

2

2

-

2

-

-

-

-

-

-

SIPs

-

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Other

1

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

Reported involvement in youth specific prevention and cessation intervention is relatively high and across most agency types, especially in relation to prevention (Table 7.7). Enforcement involvement was only reported by trading standards respondents.  Training provision was undertaken by health promotion and primary care respondents and development of materials was only reported by one respondent.

 

Prevention

Substantive projects were reported in this area, mainly based in schools settings.  Smokebusters and Smokefree Class interventions were reported by the health promotion respondent, together with school-based prevention activities undertaken by primary care respondents (Figure 7.7a).  Youth work activities tended to focus on No Smoking Day.  Finally, a local council substance misuse officer highlighted a Don't Start and Win initiative.  Remaining activities not reported here covered No Smoking Day events and general information provision in the youth work sector.

 

Cessation

The main cessation projects reported are outlined in Figure 7.7b.  They include Quit and Win, a primary care-based cessation programme that can be used by 16+ year olds and youth work discussion-based approach.

 

Enforcement

Trading standards officers were the only respondents reporting involvement in this area.  In addition to spot checks and advice and warnings to retailers on alleged underage sales, the following were also mentioned:

  • earlier test purchasing exercises reported by both respondents
  • issuing of 'Validate' Proof of Age cards to 12-18 year old secondary school pupils reported in one area.  This also targeted shop keepers and management of pubs and clubs and entailed visits to all the secondary schools

No new enforcement activities were outlined, linked with the current restrictions on test purchase.

 

Training

Eight respondents reported receiving training in this area.  The health promotion department was the reported source for most respondents across primary care, statutory youth work and voluntary sector agencies.  Health promotion respondents reported receiving training from HEBS/ASH Scotland, Fast Forward, and Dumfries and Galloway NHS Board. Training topics mainly addressed cessation but prevention, Smokebusters and No Smoking Day topics were also highlighted.  One trading standards officer mentioned training from the Trading Standards Institute addressing underage sales.  Reflecting the picture already outlined, health promotion respondents were the only reported providers of training.  Targets included school nurses and youth workers (cessation); primary school and PSE secondary school teachers (Smokebusters and Smokefree class); and community education workers (awareness raising).


Figure 7.7a Forth Valley NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Smokebusters

10-12 years

School students, teachers

Development of teaching pack/piloted pack with teachers

Group work / skills training for pupils / training for teachers

Pilot Oct 99 – Mar 00.  Training May 00/Oct 00. 

Use of pack ongoing

Forth Valley Smokebusting teaching pack

Individual schools and Education Departments from 3 council areas

Smokefree Class

12-14 years

School students, teachers

Competition based initiative with 2nd years including 6 inputs in PSE classes over 6 months – group work / discussions /info giving/ skills training

Piloted Oct 00-March 01.  Planned to start again in Oct 01

Forth Valley Smokefree Class pack

Individual schools and Education Departments from 3 council areas

Primary Care

Smoking prevention

 

10-15 years

School students

Encouraging young children to look after themselves. 'Healthy Bodies'.  Short sessions

Smokebusters pack, Roy Castle video

Smoking prevention session

10-15 years

School students

 

Video, leaflets, questionnaire

Statutory Youth Work

General information giving during No Smoking Day Week

16-20 years

Youth group attenders

Informal information giving at youth group.  Discussion around advertising etc

On going

Posters, leaflets sent to us for the week

Voluntary Sector

No Smoking Day workshops

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders

Role plays, quizzes

Materials provided by FVHB

Local Council

(Development officer, substance misuse)

Don't Start and Win

(Quit and Win)

10-15 years

 

Health Promotion, Community Services, Community Groups

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.


Figure 7.7b Forth Valley NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Planning advertising approach on cessation to young people

16-20 years

FE / HE students

Involved with group of MSC students at Stirling University

Own materials on advertising campaign devised by MSC students

 

Quit and Win / Don't Start and Win

(also reported by Local Council Development Officer- substance misuse)

10-15 years

Youth Group attenders

Competition based using peer support to help young people give up smoking.

Young people developed materials e.g. diary

3 months

Various leaflets, but young people developed their own e.g. diary.

Joint funded – FVHB and Off The Record Project a Forth Valley wide voluntary organisation

Primary Care

Smoking Cessation Clinic

 

16+ years

Wider community

Motivational support, supply of NRT / Zyban in clinic setting on a one-to-one approach.

Started March 2001, ongoing weekly basis

Leaflets from HEBS.  Material from Smoking Cessation Co-ordinator at Health Promotion

Statutory Youth Work

Youth group – smoking cessation

16-18 years

youth group attenders

Youth group looking to review habits and experiment in different types of relaxation

July 2001 onwards

Various – to be set up

Funding from Health Promotion

Planned Activity

Health promotion

 

Young people 12-18 in a deprived community

HIF grant awarded for work in 3 youth group members

£4,000 per year 2001-2004

HIF Grant

Primary care

 

High School students

High School students

 

Statutory Youth Work

 

Young people

Appointing sessional youth worker in cessation context

Work funded but priorities and activities not set yet

 

7.8 Tayside NHS board area

Tayside NHS Board is situated in the East of Scotland and includes large cities and coastal towns as well as a rural hinterland.  It encompasses three local authority areas.

Table 7.15 Tayside NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

 

 

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion /
Health Board

1

-

1

-

1

1

-

-

-

-

Primary Care

2

-

2

-

1

1

-

-

-

-

Trading Standards

3

-

2

-

-

3

-

1

1

-

Statutory Youth Work

9

7

2

3

1

-

1

-

3

1

Voluntary Sector

-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SIPs

1

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Other

-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reported involvement in youth specific prevention and cessation is focussed on youth sector respondents, although more respondents from other agency types are involved at a general level (Table 7.15). Involvement in enforcement activity is reported by health promotion and a respondent from primary care.  Reported training provision is relatively limited, but youth work and trading standards respondents reported development of support materials.

 

Prevention

A variety of projects were reported in this area (Figure 7.15a).  In addition to school-based sessions and No Smoking Day related interventions, projects that have been less commonly described elsewhere include: the 'Healthy Dundee' Smoking Challenge Fund; use of the internet and video making; peer education; Drug and Alcohol Free Time (DAFT); and awareness raising of enforcement issues.

 

Cessation

A small number of cessation specific projects were outlined.  Remaining activities, in addition to those included in Figure 7.15b, incorporated No Smoking Day activities.

 

Enforcement

Two Trading Standards officers reported earlier test-purchasing initiatives, one of whom also mentioned a survey of retailers on this issue.  Another addition to more routine inspections reported was a one-day exercise observing sales from mobile shops to under-16s outside schools with police assistance.  Issuing Proof of Age cards was mentioned in one area utilising HIPs funding (see prevention) and a health promotion respondent reported involvement in support of this scheme.  

 

Training

Six respondents outlined training experience.  As with other areas, health promotion was the main source of training for most agencies.  The health promotion respondent had attended HEBS/ASH Scotland seminars on cessation.  One youth worker had attended training given by Inverclyde Council on raising the issue of tobacco with young people.  Reports of provision of training indicated little which was young person specific, but in the statutory youth work sector, YES workers were given training in information giving, prevention and cessation.


Figure 7.15a  Tayside NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

'Healthy Dundee'

Smoking Challenge Fund

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders, community groups, general public, uniformed organisations

Financial Support (up to £100) for organisations and groups  relating to young people to develop an initiative relating to smoking prevention

April 2000-2001

Trading Standards, environmental health, public health

Internal funding: 'Healthy Dundee'

Support for New Community Schools

10-20 years

Schools

Health promotion support for development of health curriculum, including smoking

School nurses, teachers

Primary Care

No Smoking Day

10-15 years

Secondary school students

(several schools)

Focus on NSD, encouragement to remain non-smoking

NSD materials

Trading Standards

Schools education

16-20 years

School students

Issue of Proof of Age cards - awareness raising

Proof of Age cards

Statutory Youth Work

Internet access to information on smoking

8-18 years

Youth group attenders

Internet

 

Peer Education / Action Research project

School students, youth group attenders

   

DAFT - Drug and Alcohol Free Time – non-smoking activities

     

Discussion groups – youth congress / council

10-20 years

Youth group attenders

   

Smoking sessions with Primary 6/7

Primary 6 and 7

Sessions in class looking at image and health – sometimes as part of wider approach to drugs

(1.5 hour sessions)

Snakes and ladders / attitudes to smoking

 

Drug awareness

10-20 years

Wide range including looked after / accommodated teenagers and those with special needs

Discussions

Variety of commercial and in service materials

DAT, police, drug agencies

SIP

Video of young people's attitudes

10-20 years

Young people interviewing other young people about their lives - sections on health and well being

CSV Media

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.


Figure 7.15b Tayside NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Primary Care

High risk primary relatives of Coronary Heart Disease Patients

16 years +

Primary relatives of CHD Patients

Encouraged to remain non-smoking

If smoking, brief intervention , more help if wished

(NRT since May 2000)

Over 3 years

Local materials

Statutory Youth Work

 

Planning to stop

Awareness raising

Healthy sporting activities / fruit tester

10-20 years

Youth group attenders

Action plans for stopping smoking, info on long term and short term risks

Raise awareness of long term risks of smoking

Young people experience alternatives to smoking

Internet, artwork, cigarette filters

Funding Tayside Health Promotion  'Smoking Challenge'

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Cessation groups

Further Education

To organise and run smoking cessation groups in the FE college sector

Three years: April 2002 - April 2005

 

Primary Care

Information

Secondary schools and higher education

Working with school nursing services to provide more information on where and how help can be obtained.

September 2001 onwards

(Prevention and cessation)

7.9 Ayrshire and Arran NHS board

The Ayrshire and Arran NHS Board area is a mix of small towns, some with pockets of deprivation, and rural areas.  There are three local authority areas within its boundaries.

Table 7.3  Ayrshire and Arran NHS Board area:  overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

2

1

-

-

1

1

-

-

-

1

Primary Care

3

2

1

2

-

1

2

-

-

-

Trading Standards

3

-

-

-

-

3

-

1

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

3

2

1

2

-

-

1

-

2

-

Voluntary Sector

1

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

SIPs

-

                 

Other

-

                 

A relatively high level of reported involvement in youth-specific prevention and cessation activities was reported (Table 7.3). As well as trading standards, other agencies also reported involvement in enforcement.  Training provision was reported by primary care, trading standards and statutory youth work respondents and development of materials was highlighted in the youth work sector.

Prevention

The examples given in Figure 7.3a illustrate a variety of approaches across a variety of settings, including individual respondents citing more than one approach and target. Less commonly reported work highlighted here was the utilisation of drama-based approaches, and the highlighting of young parents as the main target in one activity.

Cessation

Figure 7.3b outlines examples drawn from the small number of cessation activities reported, including a school-based peer education project.  Additionally several school-based smoking cessation groups in secondary schools have been developed in the area and are supported by a facilitator from the Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation (see Chapter 6).

Enforcement

In addition to more common activities reported, including routine inspection and leaflet distribution and with covert surveillance, the following was identified: Proof of Age scheme, with free Proof of Age cards issued to young people aged 16+ years, together with free display materials issued to traders, reported in one local authority area.  This was also mentioned by the health promotion respondent who indicated supporting the development of the scheme.

Training

Only two respondents reported receiving related training, both focussing on cessation: one primary care worker had received training from a youth training centre and one had attended a Fast Forward seminar.  Interestingly, four respondents reported providing training, including training of youth workers within the youth work sector and a smoking cessation update for school nurses reported by a primary care respondent.  A trading standards respondent outlined training interventions targeting all 16+ year olds, together with traders, retailers and licensees in relation to underage sales and the Proof of Age scheme.

 

Figure 7.3a Ayrshire and Arran NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Primary Care

Teenage health clinic

10-20 years

School students

In GP practice, HV led primary prevention.

Weekly

Smoking - the facts

School health promotion programme

10-20 years

School students

Discussion groups

Mainholm Academy Community School

Relevant HEBS materials

Work with Schools as part of the curriculum

 

School nurse and HV role

 

Ingredients of cigarette

 

 

Discussion

 

Quiz

10-15 years

School students

Information given re. some ingredients and their addiction, cancer causing agents and causes of heart disease

 

General debate about whether agree or disagree with statement given on flash cards

Quiz questions to see if pupils have picked up information given

Cardboard cigarette and cards given to pupils with ingredients - to decide which is in cigarette or not

Flash cards

Quiz sheets

Statutory Youth Work

No Smoking Day promotion

10-15 years

Youth groups attenders

Display stands / publicity leaflets and information quizzes and discussion

Focus on day - but awareness raising throughout year

In-house produced quiz, AAHB resource materials

All activities are ongoing as part of our work with young people

Letterbox project

11-18 years

Youth groups attenders

Although primarily tackling sexual health issues - general health inducing smoking is an ongoing focus

Health Board materials

Relationship with young person is important in effecting change in their lifestyle and choices

Funding: AAHB and CES

Target leisure project

10-20 years

Youth groups attenders, looked after / accommodated teenagers, young people with special needs

Has a focus on drugs/alcohol misuse - but again aims to affect change in lifestyle and choices

Focus on outdoor/adventure activities linked to healthy lifestyles

(Personal development plans)

Social Work Department

Funding: SIP and CES

Highs and lows board game and drama  smoking project

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders, youth workers

Peer education with young people aged 13+ on a drug awareness board game and writing a play on smoking issues.

9 months

Group designed their own materials posters, board game and play

Local health promotion unit, Bridge Project

Young parents project

16-20 years

Young parents

Discussion groups with young parents regarding issues relating to smoking, included as part of a healthy programme.  Fire safety also looked at smoking in the home

6 weekly programme

HPU materials, open university materials, leaflets from fire safety officer

Primary Care, Health visitors, Health Promotion, Fire Service

Youth group

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders

Short discussion and distribution of information to young people on smoking related issues

Materials received from health promotion unit (HPU), posters etc

Bridge Project, HPU

Voluntary Sector

Smokerlyser Health Promotion Department

 

Used amongst young people to assess lung capacity and effects of smoking

ad hoc

Smokerlyser

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Tobacco awareness sessions - primary schools

10-15 years

Primary school students, parents

Development of resource pack and familiarisation training for staff and school nurses - secured NOF funding

3 years from Sept 2001

Resource created

Primary Care Trust, Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation, Local Authority

Primary Care

Tobacco use strategy review

Children and young people, adults

To look at strategy for primary prevention and provision of services for tobacco use within the LHCC family

(potentially also cessation)

 

Secondary and primary school pupils

HIF monies

3 years

(potentially also cessation)

Statutory Youth Work

NSD promotion and support

Youth club members

Follow-up and NSD promotion with support group

 

Figure 7.3b  Ayrshire and Arran NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Primary Care

Opportunistic one-to-one

 

10-20 years

School students, parents

In health centre, GP practice, school or family home setting - individual goal setting

HEBS - local smoking cessation packs and helpline numbers

Peer Group Smoking Cessation

 

12-18

School students

Trained peer supporters working with school population

Dec 2000 - Mar 2001

Smokerlyser, educational materials

Dietician, dental hygienist, school nurse, teachers

Voluntary Sector

Ongoing verbal support

10-20 years

Youth group attenders

During drop-in, staff provide ongoing support and discouragement of smoking to young smokers

 

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.

7.10 Highland NHS board area

Highland NHS Board area is geographically extensive, with a largely rural and scattered population.

 

Table 7.10  Highland NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

1

1

-

1

-

-

-

1

-

-

Primary Care

2

-

2

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Trading Standards

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

1

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

SIPs

1

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Other

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

A relatively high proportion of respondents reported involvement in prevention activities, but cessation activities were less prominent (Table 7.10).  Enforcement activities were only reported by the trading standards respondent and no training provision or development of support materials were described.

 

Prevention

Despite the small numbers, some substantive prevention and education projects are apparent as shown in Figure 7.10a, including a three year school-based project, a needs assessment exercise and peer education workshops.

 

Cessation

As shown in Figure 7.10b, a schools-based cessation project was identified.  Remaining projects reported were linked to the prevention projects shown in Figure 7.10a.  The planned cessation activities described relate to looked after and accommodated young people.

 

Enforcement

In addition to routine inspection and investigation of complaints alleging under age supply, the trading standards respondent also reported: a survey of shops using underage volunteers to determine levels of under-age supply (December 1999 - January 2000).

 

Training

The health promotion respondent and the respondent from the voluntary sector both reported receiving training. The former cited HEBS/ASH events and attending an ENYPAT meeting which addressed prevention and cessation; and the latter received training from health promotion focusing on tobacco awareness.  No training provision for workers was outlined by respondents.

 

Figure 7.10a Highland NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Smokefree project

10-15 years

Primary school students

Curriculum based materials for primary schools

Duration 3 years

Training packs, curriculum materials, leaflets

Teachers

European funding

Needs assessment

10-20 years

Focus groups

April-December 2000

Smoking cessation budget

 

Voluntary Sector

Healthy living workshops

10-20 years

School students

In school setting

On going for past 3 years

Paper based leaflets

Funding: Comic Relief

Peer education workshop

10-20 years

Youth group attenders, community group attenders

In school setting and youth café workshops

 

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.

 

Figure 7.10b Highland NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

 

Health Promotion

Schools based cessation project

14-16 years

School students

Peer support / group work

Aug 2001-2004

Youth workers / Teachers

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Group and 1-to-1 support

Looked after and accommodated young people

Group and 1-to-1 support for this target group

3 years (December 2001-2004?)

 

7.11 Borders NHS board area

The Borders NHS Board is in a predominantly rural area, with many of the population on low incomes reflecting economic change in the area.

Table 7.4  Borders NHS Board area:  overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion /
Health Board

1

1

-

-

1

-

1

-

-

-

Primary Care

2

-

-

-

2

-

-

-

-

-

Trading Standards

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

2

1

1

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

2

-

-

1

-

-

1

-

-

-

SIPs

-

                 

Other

-

                 

There was a relatively low proportion of youth targeted involvement reported (Table 7.4) across both prevention and cessation. In addition to the trading standards officer, one statutory youth worker reported related enforcement activities. In-house training provision was reported by health promotion and a voluntary sector respondent.

 

Prevention

There were no substantive youth and tobacco focussed projects identified in this area, but the projects outlined in Figure 7.4a indicated that smoking would be addressed in work with young people in the school and youth work context. The planned activities described focussed on facilitating school nurses in tobacco-related issues.

 

Cessation

One activity supporting youth cessation work was described, again in the school context (Table 7.4b). The remaining cessation project described related to a health centre population and covered all ages. No planned cessation activities were described, although a new post of Smoking Cessation Co-ordinator has been created in the Primary Care Trust.

 

Enforcement

The trading standards respondent reported the investigation of complaints about sales to underage children, and the issuing of warning letters reflecting the difficulty of lack of evidence for proceedings.  In addition:

  • a Proof of Age scheme was reported as being investigated by trading standards
  • an earlier underage survey was reported using volunteers to effect test purchase, in co-operation with the Education Department, the Health Board, and the Police
  • a statutory youth worker described undertaking talks and group work with youth group attenders addressing enforcement issues

 

Training

Three respondents described receiving training.  The health promotion respondent had attended the Fast Forward event on preventive work with young people and a statutory youth worker reported training by the health promotion department on smoking cessation and prevention. One respondent reported attending a course at Queen Margaret University College, Edinburgh, on 'Education for Change'.  No respondents outlined providing training for workers.

 

Figure 7.4a  Borders NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Developing health promoting school approach

10-20 years
School students, teachers

Developing health promoting school approach within New Community Schools and other schools within area

Audit, identification of priorities, encouraging positive ethos / environment

Encouraging use of smoking materials with teachers as and when requested

Statutory Youth Work

Supply of resources to other youth organisations

10-20 years
School students, youth group attenders

No smoking pack sent out to youth organisations in Berwickshire

ASH and HEBS

Youth information

10-15 years
School students

'Open Door' sessions at school

 

Youth work curriculum

12-17 years
Youth group attenders

Within youth work programmes, smoking issues are part of the curriculum

 

Planned Activity

Primary care

School nurse support

Young people at school

To work with school nurses raising awareness of tobacco inequalities/health issues.  To provide training/support for the school nurses.

 

 

Figure 7.4b  Borders NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Support for school nurses' smoking cessation work

10-20 years
School students

Providing support for school nurses' smoking cessation work through the secondary school drop-in clinics

Providing health information resources, e.g. Comic Company

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.

7.12 Fife NHS board area

Fife NHS Board area is located in the East Coast of Scotland, with a mix of urban population to the South and coastal areas and a more rural population inland.

 

Table 7.6  Fife NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion /
Health Board

1

-

1

1

-

-

-

1

1

-

Primary Care

3

2

1

1

1

-

1

-

-

-

Trading Standards

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

2

1

1

1

1

1

1

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

-

                 

SIPs

-

                 

Other

-

                 

A relatively high proportion of respondents reported involvement in youth focussed prevention and cessation activities (Table 7.6), especially from primary care and youth work. As well as trading standards, one youth worker also expressed involvement in enforcement issues. Training provision and development of support materials were undertaken by health promotion, and primary care and statutory youth work respondents also reported training activities.

 

Prevention

The activities identified show that work relating to smoking is addressed in school and youth work contexts, the former by school nurses based in primary care (Figure 7.6a).  Apart from one discussion workshop and a No Smoking Day event which encouraged pupil and teacher participation, activities tended to be more opportunistic, addressing smoking as it arose among other issues.

 

Cessation

A substantive smoking cessation programme was described by the health promotion respondent based in a school setting (Figure 7.6b). Development of a teen health website in the youth work context was reported by a respondent from primary care.  Remaining projects described related to information provision.

 

Enforcement

Reported activities related to investigation of complaints - visiting the shop and issuing informal warnings; followed up with surveillance if necessary - and inspection of display of statutory 'under-16s' notices.  The following was also noted:   utilisation of retailers' packs developed by Fife Health Care Health Promotion.

 

Training

Four respondents reported receiving training in their area.  Three were primary care respondents, who outlined the following sources: a HEBS/ASH workshop, health promotion, and the primary care trust. Topics included research issues, brief intervention, prevention/cessation and tobacco awareness.  The trading standards respondent reported receiving training from the health promotion department in relation to point of sales materials for retailers.


Figure 7.6a Fife NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Primary Care

Education

School students

School nurses in PSE classes, single sessions

HEBS posters / Funded Health Promotion

Workshops

Youth health project

Workshops at youth health project

Single sessions

HEBS materials / Social Work Department, Community Services

No Smoking Day

10-20 years

School students, teachers

On national NSD Raising awareness in school community,

pupil and staff participation in manning displays etc.

Displays, quiz.

National and local

One to one health promotion (during appointment sessions)

10-15 years

School students

General health information to include specific smoking information

Daily as part of 20 minute appointments

Leaflets backed up by verbal information

Statutory Youth Work

Discussion workshop

10-20 years

School students, youth group attenders

Informal discussions with group of non smokers

1 evening

 

Part of general health/fitness

10-20 years

Youth group attenders, community group attenders, wider community

Various short-term events and activities - group work, discussion, providing starter information, part of general health/fitness

Health promotion

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.

 

Figure 7.6b Fife NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

"No Nicoteens"

(cessation sessions)

3rd and 4th year (female) school students

5 x ½ hour lunch time sessions held in school.  Informal approach giving 3rd and 4th year girls ownership of their group.  Emphasis on getting advice and weight matters.

8th May - 5th June 2001

Gasp 'Why not quit now?'  Quit smoking guide for young people / School nurse, Primary Care Trust

Primary Care

Youth development work/

developing website

16-20 years

School students, youth group attenders, wider community

Youth development work addressing teenage health aspects

Developing a teenage web site

In development / Health professionals, education sector

Statutory Youth Work

Group work / information provision

10-20 years

Youth group attenders, community group attenders, wider community

Occasional events, group work, providing information

Health promotion

Planned Activity

Health promotion

Sessional input on cessation and prevention

Young people in a geographic location

Multi-agency youth initiative to provide sessional input to a specific geographical area on prevention and cessation with young people.

October/November 2001 start

Health Promotion, Leisure and Recreation, Community Education, Voluntary Sector

Primary care

Group support and NRT

Young homeless people

8 week group support (counselling and NRT with backup from staff in unit) 

October-November 2001, for 8 weeks

 

Statutory Youth Work

Training

Youth workers

Training courses for youth workers enabling them to develop curriculums

 

7.13 Dumfries and Galloway NHS board area

The Dumfries and Galloway NHS Board area is geographically extensive, with a largely rural and scattered population.

 

Table 7.5  Dumfries and Galloway NHS Board area: overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

1

-

1

-

1

-

1

1

-

-

Primary Care

2

1

1

-

1

-

1

1

-

-

Trading Standards

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

2

1

1

2

-

-

-

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

-

                 

SIPs

-

                 

Other

-

                 

Although respondent numbers are low, there is a proportionately high involvement in prevention and cessation activities, although not all are youth specific (Table 7.5). The trading standards respondent was the only one reporting involvement in enforcement and training was provided by health promotion and primary care.

Prevention

Smoking focussed interventions were reported in schools and in youth work settings, including use of a peer education approach and utilisation of No Smoking Day as a trigger for activities (Figure 7.5a).

 

Cessation

Opportunistic cessation support was outlined in both school and youth work settings (Figure 7.5b) although with low numbers. Future activities reported, indicated an expansion towards work in the FE sector.

 

Enforcement

The following activities were reported by the trading standards respondent:

  • The introduction of a Proof of Age card.  In conjunction with general publicity, cards were introduced in the local secondary school.  A wide range of targets were identified in addition to the young people - parents, teachers, shop keepers, management of pubs and providers of illegal cigarettes.  Local police and businesses were also involved.  The respondent is chair of the local Proof of Age group
  • National Consumer Week '99.  A mobile display moved around the region over a three month period, visiting schools and libraries.  School classes were held.

 

Training

None of the respondents in this area reported receiving training.  Health promotion and primary care respondents reported providing training to health professionals and the voluntary sector covering a brief intervention approach to cessation, but not necessarily youth specific.  Within the youth work sector, one respondent commented that training is linked to provision and responding to needs identified by workers, to help them to provide settings 'where many issues, including smoking, can be examined'.

 

Figure 7.5a  Dumfries and Galloway NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Health Promoting School

5-9 years
10-15 years
School students, teachers

Smoking is an issue addressed within this context

 

Primary Care

School based work

 

Providing lessons on tobacco industry  etc

 

Statutory youth work

Peer education work (in secondary school setting)

12-16 years
school students

Community worker working with peer-education group: W.I.L.D. @ Stranraer Academy (Working to Improve Lifestyles Daily) informally in school setting.  Theme: smoking

Discussions, role play, art, activities

Group met 1 lunchtime per week 26 Oct 2000 - 1 Mar 2001

Own materials for sessions

Countdown to No Smoking Day fun event

12-18 years

School students, teachers

Event held in Stranraer Academy, all pupils and teachers invited.  Pupils involved through art lessons in designing a T-shirt for no smoking day theme, fitness competitions, wordsearch competition, information and displays on smoking and planning to stop

Own display materials and information leaflets on smoking/not smoking / stopping smoking etc from Dumfries and Galloway Health Board, Health Promotion Department and 'Kiss it Goodbye'.  No Smoking Day 2001 promotional materials

Games and activities evening - youth club setting.

10-15 years

Youth group attenders

Games and activities evening centred round 'No Smoking Day' theme.  Also display and information leaflets on smoking/stopping smoking etc.

One evening - March 2000

Own games/activities.  Info from D&G Health Board Health Promotion Department

            

Provision of materials as required

 

Provision of materials as required, re. stopping smoking /dangers of smoking and discussion where required.  The informal nature of this work encourages serious debate whilst not exerting pressure, but supporting young people to analyse the issues regarding smoking

Where materials required (publicity leaflets etc) these will be sourced through for example the Health Board

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.


Figure 7.5b Dumfries and Galloway NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials / Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Offering cessation support through schools

10-20 years
School students

Smoking is an issue addressed within this context

Smoking Matters Service, guidance teacher / Smoking cessation money ringfenced (overall service not targeted)

Statutory Youth Work

Galloway Youth Enquiry Service

12-25 years
School/FE/HE  students, youth club attenders, teachers

Providing young people with easily accessible and understandable information (to enable them to make informed decisions and choices about their lives including, where requested, smoking).

Weekly YES in Academy, College, Youth Café etc.

Various info leaflets from Dumfries and Galloway Health Board, Health Promotion Department

Planned Activity

Primary care

Planned work in FE and with health promotion

14-18 years and 18-30 years

Targeting in FE and partnership with health promotion (all at planning stage)

 

7.14 Shetland NHS board area

Shetland is a predominantly rural area with the population scattered over 15 inhabited islands as well as centred in the main town of Berwick.

Table 7.14  Shetland NHS Board area:  overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion /
Health Board

1

-

1

-

1

-

1

1

1

1

Primary Care

-

                 

Trading Standards

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

1

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

SIPs

-

                 

Other

-

                 

Overall there was a proportionately low involvement in youth specific prevention and cessation projects. Training provision and development of support materials relating to this area of work was undertaken by health promotion.

 

Prevention

The prevention activities shown in Figure 7.14a identify smoking specific projects, with No Smoking Day being used as a basis for wider activities.

 

Cessation

The following activity in Figure 7.14b gives greater detail of an ASH funded project in the context of cessation. The only additional cessation activity was reported in the context of primary care and aimed at the adult practice population.  The planned activities noted in Figure 7.14a in relation to prevention also potentially address cessation.

 

Enforcement

The trading standards respondent reported undertaking a routine inspection and monitoring of compliance with requirements to display notices regarding sales to under-16 year olds.

 

Training

Activities reported by health promotion related to cessation training sessions for practice and community nurses in their work with practice populations, and for midwives focussing on smoking in pregnancy and passive smoking issues.

 

Figure 7.14a  Shetland NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

  Health Promotion

No Smoking Day

 

Newspaper article, free pack of helpful information from health promotion or occupational health

1 week

Pack of detailed information around smoking, benefits of stopping - not starting

Voluntary sector

ASH project

10-15 years

Youth group attenders

Partner in delivery of programme to young people in specific area promoting healthy lifestyles

8 weeks Sept / Oct 2001

Leaflets, quizzes, questionnaires / Health Promotion Department, youth worker, community organisation

Funding - ASH grant

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

 

10-20 year olds

Tobacco forum to be formed and will identify gaps and prioritise work in these areas

On going

(Prevention and cessation)

 

12-17 years

Secondary schools

Details to be finalised.  Discussion groups, video (Mission Impossible) possibly cessation work

 


Figure 7.14b  Shetland NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

  Health Promotion

ASH Scotland - smoking and low income

12-17 years

and

18+ years

School students, youth group attenders

Two groups

      -     one women 18+

      -     one mixed 12-17 year old.

Women concentrated on feeling good, building self-esteem, reflexology, aromatherapy etc.

Mixed group concentrated on sport/being active

Jan 2001 - Sept 2001

HEBS

'Stopping smoking made easier'

Helping people to stop smoking

Keeping your weight under control while kicking the habit

Community workers, youth workers, volunteers

Funding - ASH Scotland

Planned Activity:  See Figure 7.14a.

7.15 Orkney NHS board area

The Orkney NHS Board area has relatively low population numbers, largely scattered across the islands.

 

Table 7.13  Orkney NHS Board area:  overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

1

-

1

-

1

-

-

-

-

-

Primary Care

-

                 

Trading Standards

-

                 

Statutory Youth Work

1

1

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Voluntary Sector

-

                 

SIPs

-

                 

Other

-

                 

The two respondents were drawn from health promotion and statutory youth work.  There was little involvement in youth specific work or training and development of support materials (Table 7.13).

 

Prevention

The prevention activities reported focussed on information provision and development of the local strategy on drugs, alcohol and smoking (Figure 7.13a).  Promotion of No Smoking Day was also reported.

 

Cessation

One youth related activity was reported in addition to the development of a general population cessation service (Figure 7.13b).

Enforcement

No enforcement activities were described, but in this context the health promotion respondent referred to the multi-agency strategy (Figure 7.13a) which would have enforcement implications.

 

Training

Cessation training for health professionals was reported by the health promotion respondent.


Figure 7.13a  Orkney NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Develop local strategy and action plan on drugs, alcohol and smoking

All ages, wider community

Throughout year

2000-2002 and ongoing

Social services, Education, Trading Standards, Environmental Health, Voluntary Sector, local businesses

Statutory Youth Work

General information

10-15/16 years

Youth group attenders

(Also member of DASAT group)

Youth group membership and workers

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Multi-agency action plan

Everyone including young people

Multi-agency action plan following on from recently developed drugs, alcohol and smoking strategy:

From Sept 2001

(Potentially prevention, cessation and enforcement)

 

10-24 years

Multi-agency audience

Presentation of research from ENYPAT Spring school to multi-agency audience

 

 

Figure 7.13b  Orkney NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Attend ENYPAT spring school

 

All

Range of settings including wider community

EU funded seminar on young people and smoking

March 2002

 

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

Pilot cessation

10-24 years

Hope to develop pilot with other Island Boards on cessation with ASH/HEBS funding

 

7.16 Western Isles NHS board area

The Western Isles NHS Board area encompasses widely dispersed island communities.

 

Table 7.16  Western Isles NHS Board area:  overview (n)

 

Total

Prevention/ education: Directly

Prevention/ education: Potentially

Cessation: Directly

Cessation: Potentially

Enforcement

Training: In-house

Training: Other agencies

Support materials: Internal use

Support materials: Other agency

   

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q15

10-20
Q25


Q34


Q12


Q12


Q12


Q13


Q13

Health Promotion / Health Board

1

1

-

1

-

1

-

1

1

-

Primary Care

-

                 

Trading Standards

1

-

-

-

-

1

-

-

-

-

Statutory Youth Work

-

                 

Voluntary Sector

-

                 

SIPs

-

                 

Other

-

                 

The two respondents were from health promotion and trading standards (Table 7.16).  Health promotion showed involvement in youth specific prevention and cessation activities, together with related training and development of materials.

 

Prevention

The only prevention activity reported - Smokebusters - is shown in Table 7.16a.


Cessation

The youth cessation intervention reported related to a GP referral scheme (Figure 7.16b).

 

Enforcement

In addition to checking compliance with age warning notices and responding to tobacco-related complaints, the following activities were reported:

  • 'Validate' Proof of Age card was mentioned by the trading standards and health promotion respondents, highlighting partnership working
  • responsible Retailer Award was mentioned by the health promotion respondent

 

Training

The health promotion respondent reported receiving prevention and cessation training from HEBS and ASH Scotland. She also outlined providing training for education staff on tobacco and now it fits in the curriculum.

 

Figure 7.16a Western Isles NHS Board area: prevention

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

Smokebuster Project

 

10-15 years

School students,  youth group attenders

Follows the lines of the N. Ireland Smokebusters evaluation.  School and youth club based

Ongoing part-time worker (permanent)

Newsletters, SB packs etc

Planned Activity: No planned activities were described.

 

Figure 7.16b Western Isles NHS Board area: cessation

Agency Type

Title

Age / Target Group / Setting

Methods

Materials /
Other Agencies

Current Activity

Health Promotion

GP referral cessation service

16-20 years

School students

Medical alert patients / clients, eg. diabetes, asthma

1-1 cessation support

NRT voucher (only 2 clients)

Referred by GP or self-referral

NRT voucher

Planned Activity

Health Promotion

 

14-25 years

Depending on funding joint 3 island bid to ENYPAT in conjunction with research unit Highlands and Islands University

2 years Oct 2001-2003

 
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