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Methods

The International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project (the ITC Project) is an international research collaboration across 20 countries - Canada, United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea, China, Mexico, Uruguay, New Zealand, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Bhutan, France, Brazil, India, Bangladesh, and Mauritius. The primary objective of the ITC Project is to conduct rigorous evaluation of the psychosocial and behavioural effects of national-level tobacco control policies of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). The ITC Project is conducting large-scale prospective cohort surveys of tobacco use to evaluate FCTC policies.

Each ITC Survey includes key measures for each FCTC policy domain that are identical or functionally similar across the 20 countries to facilitate cross-country comparisons. The evaluation studies conducted from the ITC Surveys take advantage of natural experiments created when an ITC country implements a policy: changes in policy relevant variables in that country from pre- to post-policy survey waves are compared to other ITC countries where that policy has not changed. This research design provides high levels of internal validity, allowing more confident judgments regarding the possible causal impact of the policy.

A longitudinal cohort survey is simply a survey that measures the same variables across different populations, or countries in the case of ITC, and retains participants from year-to-year to monitor change in overall attitudes, knowledge, or behaviour within the population over time. 

Research Methods Publications

The Conceptual Framework of the International Tobacco Control (ITC) Policy Evaluation Project

Evaluating the Effectiveness of Smoke-free Policies, IARC Handbook of Cancer Prevention, Volume 13

Appendix for Netherlands Mixed Mode Paper



 

Interviewing Methods

The original ITC Surveys were conducted using telephone interviewing, and this technique continues to be used in the new countries that have been added to the ITC Project.

With the introduction of ITC-Southeast Asia (Malaysia and Thailand), a new face-to-face interview was conducted with respondents.  

Now, most of the ITC countries, use telephone interviewing, although some countries now conduct web surveys.

For a more detailed account on how the samples were obtained, please consult Technical Reports in Key Findings.

External Researcher Data Request

Please review the Data Guidelines before submitting an External Researcher Data Request. Email the completed request form to: itc@uwaterloo.ca

External Researcher Data Request

Please review the Data Guidelines before submitting an External Researcher Data Request.

Email the completed request form to: itc@uwaterloo.ca

 


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