Article Text

Original article
Short-term impact of the smokefree legislation in England on emergency hospital admissions for asthma among adults: a population-based study
  1. Michelle Sims1,
  2. Roy Maxwell2,
  3. Anna Gilmore1
  1. 1School for Health, and the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies, University of Bath, Bath, UK
  2. 2South West Public Health Observatory, Bristol, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr Michelle Sims, Tobacco Control Research Group, School for Health, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, UK; m.sims{at}bath.ac.uk

Abstract

Background Comprehensive smokefree laws have now been introduced in several jurisdictions. Few studies have examined the association between smokefree laws and asthma in adults and these have limitations, such as lacking appropriate adjustment for long-term trends or having limited statistical power due to small study populations. This study addresses these limitations and evaluates the short-term impact of smokefree legislation in England. It aims to investigate whether the introduction of smokefree legislation on 1 July 2007 was associated with an immediate reduction in emergency hospital admissions for asthma in the adult population, and whether any association differs across regions.

Methods We identified monthly numbers of emergency admissions for asthma (primary diagnosis, 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases code J45 and J46) in the nine Government Office Regions from April 1997 to December 2010 in the population aged 16 and over. A generalised additive model was fitted that adjusted for seasonality, variation in population size and region-specific, non-linear, long-term trends.

Results Smokefree legislation was associated with an immediate 4.9% (95% CI 0.6% to 9.0%) reduction in emergency admissions for asthma in the adult population. This implies that approximately 1900 emergency admissions for asthma were prevented in each of the first 3 years after legislation was introduced. The reduction in admissions did not vary significantly across regions.

Conclusions Our findings add to the expanding body of evidence that smokefree policies are associated with positive health outcomes. Further research evaluating the impact of legislation in other jurisdictions is needed to support these findings.

  • Asthma

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Key messages

What is the key question?

  • Was the introduction of smokefree legislation in England associated with an immediate reduction in emergency hospital admissions for asthma in the adult population?

What is the bottom line?

  • In this population-based study, emergency admissions for asthma in adults decreased following the introduction of smokefree legislation in England.

Why read on?

  • This study, the largest of its kind and addressing limitations of previous studies, describes the positive effect that a public health intervention can have on hospital admissions for asthma.

Introduction

Second hand smoke (SHS) exposure has significant adverse health effects on the adult respiratory system,1 with current evidence suggesting that it contributes to the onset2 and exacerbation of asthma3 ,4 and to poorer asthma health outcomes.5 Exposure also appears to be associated with a higher risk of hospital admissions for asthma within a month after exposure.6 These findings are supported by studies that show the deleterious effects of SHS exposure on airflow and airway responsiveness in those with asthma.3 ,7–,9

Comprehensive smokefree laws have now been introduced in several jurisdictions. Evidence that such legislation reduces SHS exposure (measured using specific biomarkers) among adults in hospitality workers and patrons10 and the general population of non-smokers11–,13 is accumulating. There is also a growing body of evidence documenting the immediate health benefits of smokefree laws, focusing primarily on hospital admissions for heart attacks.14 The association between legislation and asthma admissions among children,15–,17 adults17–,19 and the overall population (children and adults combined)20 ,21 has not been as thoroughly investigated. While the results from existing studies have recently been combined in a meta-analysis, which concluded that comprehensive smokefree laws are associated with a 24% (95% CI 13% to 34%) decrease in asthma admissions,14 this estimate includes studies based on widely differing age groups. Only a few studies have examined impacts in adults and collectively the findings from these studies are inconclusive. For example, studies in Ireland,19 Kentucky17 and Delaware22 reported statistically significant reductions in hospital asthma admissions after the introduction of smoke-free legislation of 40%, 24% and 5% respectively, while a New Zealand18 study reported a non-statistically significant decline of 16%. Moreover some of these studies have limited statistical power due to small study populations and it is unclear whether underlying long-term trends in asthma admissions were properly controlled for. Two of these studies, in New Zealand18 and Kentucky,17 used a Poisson regression model and adjusted for long-term trends by including a linear term for time, but there is no mention of whether the linearity assumption in the long-term trend was tested. A study in Ireland19 applied a Poisson regression model to admissions data collected for 2 years pre and post legislation, which was adjusted for differences in potential confounding factors (eg, flu and temperature) between the two time periods, but did not adjust for long-term trends which would have captured temporal changes in other risk factors. The study in Delaware also applied a Poisson regression model which adjusted for seasonal effects and population size, but the estimated effect of 5% did not include adjustment for a long-term trend.22 Incorrect assumptions about the shape of the trend or ignoring it completely can result in a biased estimate of the effect of a ban.23

We addressed the limitations of earlier studies by investigating the short-term impact of legislation in England, where virtually all enclosed public places and workplaces became smoke free on 1 July 2007. The prevalence of asthma in England is among the highest in the world, with approximately 5.9% of the population having asthma.24 Furthermore, there are stark regional differences in emergency hospital admissions for asthma across England that have widened in recent years.25 Reducing hospital admissions for asthma is therefore an objective of the current UK government's strategy for people with asthma in England. The aims of this study were to investigate whether the introduction of smokefree legislation was associated with an immediate reduction in emergency hospital admissions for asthma in the adult population, and whether any association differs across regions. We do not consider children for two reasons. First, their exposure predominantly occurs in non-public places, such as their home, and existing evidence indicates that they were less directly affected by the legislation26 ,27 compared with non-smoking adults in whom legislation has been linked to reductions in SHS exposure.13 Second, recently published work has already examined impacts in children.28

Methods

Hospital admission data

Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data provide routinely collected information on all patients who receive care provided by the National Health Service (NHS) in England.29 Each completed record in HES, a ‘finished consultant episode’ (FCE), is a continuous period of time a patient spends while under the care of one consultant within one healthcare provider. We identified hospital emergency admissions for adult asthma, selecting all emergency admission FCEs in those aged 16 years and over, resident in England, with an admission date between 1 April 1997 and 31 December 2010 and a primary diagnosis of asthma (10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) code J45 or J4630). ICD-10 coding was introduced by the NHS in England in 1995. To allow for any irregularities in coding that followed the change from ICD-9 to ICD-10, the start date of the study was delayed until 1997. The end date of 31 December 2010 was the latest date for which data were available and no longer considered provisional. Our study period therefore included 3 years and 6 months post-intervention and 10 years and 3 months pre-intervention data. Only the first FCE (known as the finished consultant admission episode) of a patient's spell in hospital was used, and these were aggregated into monthly numbers of emergency admissions according to the Government Office Region of residence of the patient (East Midlands, East of England, London, North East England, North West England, South East England, South West England, West Midlands, and Yorkshire and the Humber). Thus our data comprised 165 months for each of the nine regions (1485 observations in total). Although smoking status can be recorded in HES using ICD codes, this information is not routinely recorded and consequently we cannot accurately differentiate between smokers and non-smokers. Records with missing age values were excluded from the analysis (less than 0.05% of records).

Statistical analysis

We tested the hypothesis that there was an immediate change in the number of emergency admissions for asthma following the introduction of smokefree legislation using a Poisson generalised additive model of the monthly admissions.

To model non-linear seasonal fluctuations in admissions due to weather conditions and influenza we included penalised cubic regression splines for both. A penalised cyclic cubic spline for month was also included to capture any additional fluctuations due to seasonally varying factors other than temperature and influenza. Monthly mean temperatures for a government office region were derived by obtaining monthly mean temperature records for meteorological office stations within the region and taking the average. We obtained monthly rates of hospital admissions due to influenza for each government office region from the HES database, restricting data to admission episodes of patients aged 16 and over with a primary diagnosis of influenza (ICD-10 code J10 or J11).

Variation in monthly rates of emergency admissions for asthma and non-linearity in long-term trends among the nine government office regions was modelled using a categorical variable for region and an interaction between the categorical variable for region and a penalised cubic regression spline for time (the time series of monthly counts).

The introduction of smokefree legislation was included in the model as a binary predictor variable, with 1 assigned to admissions from July 2007 onwards and 0 assigned to admissions before July 2007. We therefore investigated whether or not there was an immediate change in emergency admissions for asthma after the smokefree legislation was introduced. We also examined whether or not the magnitude of the immediate impact of legislation varied by region by adding an interaction term between the binary smokefree legislation predictor and the categorical variable for region.

To account for the variation in the number of days per month and changes in the population size over time, number of days and population size were included as offset variables; that is, the natural logarithms of these variables were included as predictors with their regression coefficients fixed at 1. Mid-year estimates and projections of the population aged 16 and over in each government office region were obtained from the UK's Office of National Statistics. Monthly population figures were obtained by linearly interpolating mid-year population estimates for each government office region for 1996 to 2010 and population projections for 2011. Overdispersion was detected and SEs were corrected using a quasi-Poisson model.

An exploration of this model showed some short-term autocorrelation in the residuals within each region. In the final model, we therefore included a residual autoregressive structure of order 1 (AR(1)) for each region to capture this short-term serial correlation. We generated autocorrelation and partial autocorrelation plots to compare this model with one without the autocorrelation structure for the residuals to confirm that the AR(1) structure was appropriate.

To correct for differences in age and gender distribution across regions and for changes in these distributions over time, we replaced monthly counts as the outcome variable with monthly age–sex standardised counts, using the 2001 census population as the reference; we then refitted the model but did not include population size as an offset term. The difference in the estimated immediate impact of smokefree legislation between the model using population-adjusted counts or age–sex standardised counts was negligible. Consequently the results are not shown for this model.

The generalised additive model based on the time series of monthly admissions was used to predict the number of emergency admissions for asthma that were prevented as a result of smokefree legislation in the first, second and third year of implementation following an approach described elsewhere.31

Models were fitted in R.13.0 using the gam and gamm functions from the library mgcv.32 All tests were two sided and performed at the 5% level of statistical significance.

Sensitivity analyses

To provide further support for our findings we performed two sensitivity analyses. For the first analysis we randomly selected 20 false smokefree legislation dates between January 2005 and January 2008. For each false date, we fitted the model but replaced the binary smokefree predictor with a binary predictor coded as 0 for admissions before this date, and 1 for admissions from this date onwards. In the second analysis we investigated the sensitivity of our results to variations in the length of the pre-legislation and post-legislation period. We fitted the model to data with a post-legislation period of 1, 2 or 3 years and a pre-legislation period of 6–10 years. These ranges were selected based on data availability and what was allowed by the model fitting. If our model specification is appropriate we would not expect significant changes at the false dates and the estimated association between smokefree legislation and admissions for asthma would be robust to variations in the length of the pre-legislation and post-legislation periods.

Results

Impact of smokefree legislation

Over the study period 1997 to 2010, 502 000 emergency admissions among adults aged 16 and over had a primary diagnosis of asthma. Although seasonal patterns were similar across regions with higher admission rates in mid winter than in summer, there were notable differences in the level of, and long-term trends in, admission rates for asthma across regions (figure 1). For example, average monthly admission rates for the period under study ranged from 0.059 per 1000 adults in the South East to 0.089 per 1000 adults in Yorkshire and the Humber.

Figure 1

Monthly emergency hospital admission rate for asthma among adults. Observed (grey circles) monthly emergency hospital admission rate per 1000 adults for asthma in England by government office region during the period April 1997 to December 2010. The blue and red lines show the model estimated trend and de-seasonalised trend respectively (ie, with and without the seasonal components). The dashed vertical line indicates the date when smokefree legislation was introduced in England. This figure is only reproduced in colour in the online version.

After adjusting for seasonality, variation in population size and long-term trends, the introduction of smokefree legislation in July 2007 was associated with a statistically significant 4.9% drop (1 minus the exponential of −0.05; table 1) (95% CI 0.6 to 9.0) in the number of emergency admissions for asthma.

Table 1

Results of regression analysis to detect an association between smokefree legislation in England and emergency hospital admissions for asthma

Across England as a whole, we estimate that approximately 1900 emergency admissions for asthma were prevented in the first year post legislation, with a similar number of admissions prevented in the second and third years post legislation. The drop in admissions did not vary significantly across regions (p values for the interaction between the smokefree predictor and each region range from 0.29 to 0.85) and the interaction term between the smokefree legislation predictor and region was therefore not included in the final model. The residuals from our model exhibited no autocorrelation or partial autocorrelation and did not deviate significantly from model assumptions.

Sensitivity analyses

The first sensitivity analysis indicated that none of the false date predictors were significant (p<0.05). The second sensitivity analysis indicated that our model is robust to the choice of length of the pre-legislation and post-legislation period in the range allowed by the model fitting (see online supplementary tables S1 and S2 and online supplementary appendix). The range specified by the CIs was very similar when we varied the length of the pre-legislation or post-legislation period, and the association was negative and statistically significant for all but one finding (using 6 years of pre-legislative data).

Discussion

England's smoke-free legislation was associated with a statistically significant fall in emergency hospital admissions for asthma among adults. After adjusting for long-term trends in asthma and seasonality, the introduction of the ban was associated with a 4.9% reduction in admissions and this observed reduction was similar across geographical regions. This implies that almost 1900 emergency admissions for asthma were prevented in England during the first year after legislation was introduced and a similar number of emergency admissions for asthma were prevented in the subsequent 2 years. The decrease in emergency admissions for asthma among adults was lower than that observed in other countries.17–,19 ,22 This may be attributable in part to the differences in the specification of the long-term trend between these studies and ours. Apart from attempting to account for underlying secular trends we also performed additional sensitivity analyses to provide further support for our findings. Differences could also be due, in part, to a smaller reduction in SHS exposure immediately following smokefree legislation in England than in other jurisdictions attributable to the fact that many workplaces were already smoke free. This is supported by data from New York,11 Scotland12 and England,13 which showed geometric mean saliva cotinine levels in non-smoking adults declining by 47%, 39% and 27% respectively.

We identified a smaller reduction than that observed for children aged under 15 years old in England (9%, 95% CI 7% to 11%),28 although we are unable to conclude that there is a significant difference between the two estimates because there is some overlap in the 95% CIs. Our results are consistent with published work that the introduction of smokefree legislation in England is associated with a reduction in SHS exposure among non-smoking adults.13 In contrast, recent evidence suggests no corresponding reduction in SHS exposure among children.26 Assuming that the modelling assumptions in all the studies are correct, one possible explanation for the discrepancy is that there actually was an immediate reduction in SHS exposure among children after legislation was introduced but it was too small to be detected using available SHS exposure data. As children are still developing and have higher breathing rates than adults, they are more vulnerable to the effects of SHS and may show significant health benefits, even with a small change in SHS exposure. Furthermore, the majority of children are non-smokers whereas in adults 20% are smokers and therefore a small change in SHS exposure has the potential to benefit a large proportion of children.

Strengths and limitations

This study has two major strengths. First, it is the largest study to date that has evaluated the impact of smokefree legislation on admissions for asthma in adults, with data collected on all admissions for the 43 million individuals aged 16 years or older who live in England, compared with less than 7 million in each of the other studies. This offers greater statistical power to detect smaller declines in admissions in a short time scale, as observed in England. Second, we used statistical methodology that appropriately adjusted for non-linear trends in admissions. As shown in a previous smokefree evaluation, incorrect assumptions concerning the shape of the trend could bias results considerably.23

Our results were also robust to the false data analysis and moderate changes in the length of the pre-legislative and post-legislative period. We did observe a non-significant effect of smokefree legislation when using only 6 years of pre-legislative data; this coincides with a noticeable change in the long-term trend for several regions (figure 1), which introduces additional variability causing the non-significant result.

There are a number of limitations. Although our study shows a statistically significant association between the introduction of smokefree legislation and emergency admissions for asthma in adults, it does not prove a causal relationship. While there are a number of other pieces of evidence that support a causal association33 (eg, biological plausibility given the documented links between SHS exposure and airways responsiveness and exacerbations of asthma3 ,6–,9 ,34 and biologically documented reductions in an adult's SHS exposure after legislation was introduced13), studies from other jurisdictions need to be published to validate our findings.

While we accounted for seasonality, variation in population size and underlying trends in admissions, there may also be unknown confounders that are related to the outcome (admissions for asthma) and that changed at the time of the legislation, which could have contributed to the observed decline. However, we cannot suggest other factors that have this relationship and have not been included in the model. In particular, we are not aware of changes in recommendations for the treatment of asthma or of any new drugs for asthma at that time.

In common with many studies from other jurisdictions that also investigated the impact of smokefree legislation on population health, we relied on routine hospital data, and while this meant we could adjust for long-term trends, it precluded our ability to analyse admissions among non-smokers only. How much of the reduction in admissions at the time that legislation was introduced, after adjusting for pre-legislative trends, was attributable to reduced SHS exposure and how much to reductions in active smoking is therefore not clear. Recent evidence showing that smokefree legislation in England is associated with a reduction in SHS exposure among non-smoking adults,13 but not smoking prevalence or consumption among smokers,35 suggests that most of the observed reduction in admissions is in fact attributable to reduced SHS exposure. Pell et al36 were able to examine the impacts of Scotland's smokefree legislation on hospital admissions for acute coronary events according to smoking status because they conducted a prospective study, rather than a retrospective study relying on routine hospital data. However, because this study adopted a before–after study design it could not take into account the potential effect of the long-term trend in acute coronary syndrome. Not taking into account long-term trends, particularly if those of smokers and non-smokers are different, could lead to biased estimates of the impact of legislation, and highlights the need for both approaches.

A further potential limitation concerns how admissions were assigned to regions, that is, based on the patient's residence, the concern being that the region of residence may in some instances differ from where the admitted patient was exposed to the ‘cause’. This might apply for working populations, for example. However, the location of the hospital, which perhaps more closely matches with place of exposure, is often not recorded in HES, and given that this study evaluates the impact in large regions of the country, any disparity between region of patient's residence and region of patient's exposure is likely to affect only a small proportion of the population.

Conclusions

This study provides the first assessment of the impact of the legislation on hospital admissions for asthma among adults in England. It also makes an important contribution to the international debate on this topic by making a more thorough attempt to account for underlying secular trends than previous studies on this topic; and being the largest study to date, thereby overcoming the limitations of previous studies. In doing so, it provides further support to a growing body of national and international evidence of the positive effects that introducing smokefree policies has on public health.

Acknowledgments

The HES data were made available by the NHS Health and Social Care Information Centre. We would like to thank the Public Health Observatory Network for providing access to data, in particular Bobbie Jacobson, Julia Verne and Paul Brown. We are also grateful to Richard Hubbard for his comments on an earlier draft of this paper and to Ruth Salway for advice on the statistical analysis.

References

Supplementary materials

  • Supplementary Data

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Footnotes

  • Contributors AG conceptualised the study, drafted and edited the paper; MS planned and undertook the analysis, drafted and edited the paper; RM helped prepare the data and edited the paper. All authors have approved the final version.

  • Funding This work was undertaken by the University of Bath which received funding from the Department of Health's Policy Research Programme. The views expressed in the publication are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the Department of Health. AG is supported by a Health Foundation Clinician Scientist Fellowship. MS and AG are members of the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies which receives core funding from the British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, Economic and Social Research Council, Medical Research Council, and the National Institute of Health Research under the auspices of the UK Clinical Research Collaboration. The funders had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, interpretation of data, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.

  • Competing interests None.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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