Evidence-Based Guides for States

At a glance

Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs—2014 is an evidence-based guide to help states build and maintain effective tobacco control programs to prevent and reduce tobacco use. This document updates Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs—2007. This updated edition describes an integrated approach to program development and provides recommended funding levels for effective state programs.

Best Practices for Tobacco Control Programs

Cover of Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs document.
Evidence-based guidance helps states build and maintain effective tobacco control programs.

Complete Guide

Letter From the Director, Executive Summary, and Introduction

Section A. Components of a Comprehensive Tobacco Control Program

Section B. Recommended Funding Levels for All 50 States and the District of Columbia

Section C. Recommended Funding Levels, by State

Appendices

A. Funding Recommendation Formulations

B. Program and Policy Recommendations for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs

C. National Prevention Strategy Recommendations

D. Guidelines for Comprehensive Local Tobacco Control Programs

E. Data Sources

Fact sheets

Best Practices User Guide: Cessation

This user guide provides insight to the concept of health systems change and how it is used to create efficient methods for increasing and promoting automatic referrals to cessation services. There is information on how to promote health systems change, improve insurance coverage for cessation treatment, and support state quitlines.

Best Practices User Guide: Health Communications

This user guide offers program staff and partners information on how to effectively develop and implement paid media, earned media, social media, and other types of communication methods and tools to support tobacco control efforts.

Best Practices User Guide: Health Equity

This user guide offers information on how to identify gaps in health equity. It also shows how to work toward achieving health equity in tobacco control when planning, implementing, and enforcing policies, programs, and interventions.

Best Practices User Guide: Partnerships

This user guide expands and updates the recommendations in the 2009 Coalitions user guide. It helps tobacco control programs explore, develop, and maintain strategic partnerships and build coalitions to achieve commercial tobacco control goals.

Best Practices User Guide: Program Infrastructure

This user guide helps tobacco control programs address challenges with programmatic infrastructure to maintain a relevant and effective tobacco control program.

Best Practices User Guide: Putting Evidence into Practice

This user guide can help programs share information about what works to reduce commercial tobacco use. It also helps programs put new or improved tobacco control interventions into practice.

Best Practices User Guide: Youth Engagement

This user guide emphasizes that the youth perspective is critical to tobacco prevention and control. Most people start smoking cigarettes before age 18. Tobacco control programs need to understand how to engage youth as a part of a comprehensive tobacco control program.

Best Practices—Tobacco Where You Live: Native Communities

Read about the Tobacco Where You Live series and how it fits in with the Best Practices User Guides. Understand why a culturally focused approach is important to reduce commercial tobacco use disparities among American Indian and Alaska Native people.

Best Practices—Tobacco Where You Live: Mapping Techniques

Read about the Tobacco Where You Live series and how it fits in with the Best Practices User Guides. This Mapping Techniques supplement helps users create effective maps in six easy steps. Users can also learn how state programs use maps to support tobacco prevention and control goals. The supplement also helps users identify the best resources and tools to get started.

Best Practices—Retail Strategies

This Retail Strategies to Promote Health Equity supplement helps users prepare for retail work in communities and implement retail strategies equitably to achieve tobacco control goals.