California's Tobacco Control Program Slashes Cigarette Sales by 26 Packs/year.
Researchers used a method called synthetic control to study the impact of California's tobacco control program. They found that after the program was implemented in 1988, tobacco consumption in California decreased significantly compared to a similar region without the program. By the year 2000, Californians were buying about 26 fewer packs of cigarettes per person annually because of the program. This method could be useful for studying the effects of other policy interventions on large groups of people.