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Short term impact of smoke-free legislation in England: retrospective analysis of hospital admissions for myocardial infarction

BMJ 2010; 340 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.c2161 (Published 08 June 2010) Cite this as: BMJ 2010;340:c2161
  1. Michelle Sims, research officer12,
  2. Roy Maxwell, senior analyst 3,
  3. Linda Bauld, professor of social policy24,
  4. Anna Gilmore, clinical reader in public health12, clinical senior lecturer5
  1. 1School for Health, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY
  2. 2UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies, University of Bath, Bath
  3. 3South West Public Health Observatory, Bristol BS8 2RA
  4. 4Department of Social and Policy Sciences, University of Bath, Bath
  5. 5London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E 7HT
  1. Correspondence to: A Gilmore, School for Health, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY a.gilmore{at}bath.ac.uk
  • Accepted 11 February 2010

Abstract

Objective To measure the short term impact on hospital admissions for myocardial infarction of the introduction of smoke-free legislation in England on 1 July 2007.

Design An interrupted time series design with routinely collected hospital episode statistics data. Analysis of admissions from July 2002 to September 2008 (providing five years’ data from before the legislation and 15 months’ data from after) using segmented Poisson regression.

Setting England.

Population All patients aged 18 or older living in England with an emergency admission coded with a primary diagnosis of myocardial infarction.

Main outcome measures Weekly number of completed hospital admissions.

Results After adjustment for secular and seasonal trends and variation in population size, there was a small but significant reduction in the number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction after the implementation of smoke-free legislation (−2.4%, 95% confidence interval −4.06% to −0.66%, P=0.007). This equates to 1200 fewer emergency admissions for myocardial infarction (1600 including readmissions) in the first year after legislation. The reduction in admissions was significant in men (3.1%, P=0.001) and women (3.8%, P=0.007) aged 60 and over, and men (3.5%, P<0.01) but not women (2.5% P=0.38) aged under 60.

Conclusion This study adds to a growing body of evidence that smoke-free legislation leads to reductions in myocardial infarctions. It builds on previous work by showing that such declines are observed even when underlying reductions in admissions and potential confounders are controlled for. The considerably smaller decline in admissions observed in England compared with many other jurisdictions probably reflects aspects of the study design and the relatively low levels of exposure to secondhand smoke in England before the legislation.

Introduction

Numerous studies, including six meta-analyses,1 2 3 4 5 6 have shown that passive smoking increases the risk of coronary heart disease.7 Early studies estimated the increased risk at about 30%, but use of marriage to a smoker as a proxy for exposure underestimated exposure.5 Recent evidence, based on more accurate biological markers of exposure, suggests the risk could be increased by as much as 60%, similar to that observed in light active smokers.8 Although this risk might seem disproportionate, it is consistent with substantial epidemiological and laboratory evidence that the risk of coronary heart disease increases rapidly at low levels of exposure to tobacco smoke.9 10 Even small exposures have been shown to rapidly increase platelet aggregation and alter endothelial function (with such changes observed within 30 minutes of exposure) and cause other arterial and haemodynamic changes that can increase the risk of coronary heart disease and trigger acute coronary events.7 9 11 12 13 Measures that reduce exposure to secondhand smoke, such as smoke-free legislation, are therefore likely to reduce the incidence of acute coronary events, including myocardial infarction, with almost immediate effect.12

Smoke-free legislation has now been introduced in several jurisdictions, and a growing body of evidence links the introduction of this legislation with a reduction in hospital admissions for myocardial infarction and other acute coronary events.14 15 16 17 The largest impacts have been reported in smaller studies in the United States,18 19 20 with reported reductions in the range of 27-40%, while larger studies have reported more modest reductions: 8% in the state of New York,21 13% in four Italian regions,22 and 17% in Scotland.23 Only two studies in New Zealand24 and Piedmont, Italy,25 found no reduction in overall admissions for myocardial infarction, although the Italian study found an 11% decline in those aged under 60.

There is some uncertainty around the extent to which some of these studies have effectively accounted for other factors that might influence patterns of admissions for myocardial infarction. Firstly, admissions for coronary heart disease have been declining across Europe,26 27 28 29 30 the US,31 and Canada,32 and failure to account for this might lead to an overestimation of impacts. Secondly, other factors such as season, flu, and temperature have all been shown to influence the incidence of myocardial infarction with, for example, peak admission rates in winter, in spring, and over the Christmas break, and seen in association with high flu rates and low temperatures.33 34 35 36 Most studies accounted for seasonal differences when estimating impacts of smoke-free legislation on coronary heart disease, either by comparing the same months in a before-after study design20 23 25 37 38 or including a predictor for time of year in a regression model.18 21 24 Few studies, however, fully accounted for underlying trends in admissions.21 22 24 39 This is important as trends seem to differ by age group,40 41 and only one study comprehensively adjusted for other risk factors, including temperature and flu rates.39

We addressed all these issues by examining the impact of legislation on hospital admissions for myocardial infarction in England, where all enclosed workplaces and public places, with a few exceptions, became smoke-free on 1 July 2007.

Methods

Evaluating impacts of smoke-free England

Data

Hospital episode statistics (HES) data provide routinely collected information on all patients who receive care from the National Health Service (NHS) in England.42 Each completed record comprises a “finished consultant episode,” a period of time a patient spends under the care of one NHS consultant. We extracted data for all finished emergency admission episodes in those aged 18 and over living in England, with an admission date between 1 July 2002 (five years before the legislation) and 30 September 2008 (15 months after the legislation) and a primary diagnosis of ICD-10 (international classification of disease, 10th revision) code I21 (myocardial infarction).43 We retained only the first episode (known as the admission episode) of a patient’s stay in hospital because these were more likely to reflect myocardial infarction events that had occurred outside of hospital rather than those occurring as complications of hospital treatment. In line with the ICD-10 code I21 definition of “myocardial infarction specified as acute or with a stated duration of 4 weeks (28 days) or less from onset”43 and to avoid duplicate admissions for the same event, we excluded any repeat admissions within a 28 day period. Records missing data on age or sex were excluded from the analysis (less than 0.1% of records).

Statistical analyses

Using an interrupted time series design, we developed a segmented Poisson regression model44 to test the hypothesis that there was a change in the number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction immediately after the introduction of smoke-free legislation (that is, from Monday 2 July 2007 onwards). The response variable was the weekly number of admissions, with variation in week length (week 52 was eight days in a non-leap year and nine in a leap year) accounted for by including log number of days as a predictor in the model. The impact of smoke-free legislation, defined as a change in the rate of admissions for myocardial infarction after the legislation, was assessed by including a binary predictor variable in the model with a value of 1 assigned to myocardial infarction events occurring from week 27 of that year (that is, from 2 July 2007 onwards) and 0 before.

An initial exploration of the form of the long term time trend suggested that a linear assumption was appropriate, so we used a linear predictor for time to quantify the underlying downwards trend in admissions. We used 1 July 2002 as the start date, providing five years of pre-legislative data. Various additional predictors were then included in the model to account for variation in admissions for myocardial infarction attributable to factors other than the implementation of smoke-free legislation.33 34 35 36 To model the temporal fluctuations, we used temperature, flu, week of year, and an indicator variable for the Christmas holidays (1 if it is the first or last week in the year and 0 otherwise). Weekly temperatures were the mean of the daily mean surface air temperatures obtained from the Central England Temperature data series.45 46 As preliminary exploration of the data suggested that the effects of temperature might be delayed,47 we considered two predictors: temperature in the same week as the admission and temperature in the previous week. Weekly flu rates for England and Wales were obtained from the Royal College of General Practitioners’ research and surveillance centre, which collects data on consultations for flu-like illnesses from about 100 general practice surgeries, and log transformed before analysis. Temperature and flu rates were considered as linear terms in the model while week of year was included as a cyclic cubic spline to capture any additional seasonal patterns that might be non-linear.

The population estimate for England was included as an offset variable—namely, a predictor variable with a regression coefficient fixed at 1. This ensures there is a one to one relation between the population size and the number of admissions. Weekly population estimates were obtained by linearly interpolating mid-year population estimates for 2002 to 2007 and population projections for 2008 and 2009 provided by the UK’s Office for National Statistics.

Models were fitted in R.8.1 using the gam and gamm functions from the library mgcv.48 After adjustment for smoke-free legislation, number of days, and population size, we considered the other predictor variables in a backwards selection procedure to identify the best model using the mgcv library’s unbiased risk estimator (UBRE), an approximation to Akaikes Information Criterion,49 to compare candidate models. Models with a lower unbiased risk estimator are preferred.48 The suitability of the selected statistical model was assessed with plots of residuals, including an assessment of any remaining serial correlation in the residuals using autocorrelation plots. When necessary, presence of short term autocorrelation was modelled by applying a first order autoregressive AR(1) structure to the residuals.

To assess differences in the impact of smoke-free legislation among population subgroups, we stratified the data by age (<60, ≥60) and sex and performed separate analyses on each group. We also examined whether there was an increase or decrease in the slope of the trend after the legislation, compared with pre-legislative trends, by adding an interaction term between the binary predictor for smoke-free legislation and the linear predictor for time to the models. To provide further support for the findings we refitted the final models using 16 false dates for smoke-free legislation ranging from January 2005 to January 2007.

Predicting the number of events prevented

We used the final Poisson regression model to predict the number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction that were prevented as a result of smoke-free legislation in the first year of implementation. To estimate the number of averted events Ne we subtracted the regression based prediction of the number of events from 1 July 2007 to 30 June 2008 (Nw) from the predicted number of events without the influence of the legislation (Now). If β is the estimated regression coefficient for the smoke-free legislation predictor from the final Poisson regression model, Now is equivalent to Nw/exp(β). The total number of emergency admissions averted will be slightly higher than Ne because some of the events result in multiple emergency readmissions to hospital within 28 days, and we excluded these readmissions from the main analysis. Therefore, to predict the total number of emergency admissions prevented we repeated the statistical analysis on a dataset that included readmissions.

Results

Between 2000 and 2008 there was a notable decrease in the number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction, a decrease that seems to have accelerated from around 2002 and was greater in older than younger age groups (figs 1 and 2) . The seasonal pattern observed was consistent with that reported elsewhere,33 34 35 36 with a peak in admissions over Christmas and early spring, higher rates of admission over winter, and lower rates in summer (fig 3). Indeed the decline each summer was of a similar order of magnitude to the secular decline seen over the six year period studied. Most admissions occurred in men and those aged over 60 with relatively few events in women aged under 60 (table 1).

Figure1

Fig 1 Trends in weekly number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction (average daily count) from January 2000 to September 2008 by age and sex. Note different ranges on y axis

Figure2

Fig 2 Trends in overall weekly number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction (average daily count) from January 2000 to September 2008. Note, weekly numbers of admissions are sum of four graphs in figure 1

Figure3

Fig 3 Trends in overall weekly number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction (average daily count) averaged across years

Table 1

 Number of emergency admissions* for myocardial infarction in England overall and by age group

View this table:

Of the predictor variables entered in the initial models, only flu, which was highly correlated with temperature, was dropped from all models. Temperature was dropped from the models for those aged under 60 and Christmas holidays from the model for men aged under 60 (table 2). We added first order autoregressive AR(1) terms to the final models for all people and for women aged 60 and over to allow for short term autocorrelation.

Table 2

 Results of Poisson regression analyses to detect association between smoke-free legislation in England and emergency admissions for myocardial infarction

View this table:

After the implementation of smoke-free legislation, there was a significant drop of 2.4% (P=0.007) in the number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction (table 2). This implies that just over 1200 emergency admissions for myocardial infarction were prevented over a 12 month period. Given that an initial myocardial infarction might result in several subsequent emergency admissions to hospital, this equates to around 1600 fewer emergency admissions. The subgroup analyses indicated that the legislation had an impact in men and women aged 60 and over, with a reduction of 3.07% (P=0.001) and 3.82% (P=0.007), respectively. Men aged under 60 also showed a significant drop in admissions of 3.46% (P<0.01), but the regression analysis gave no indication of a decline in younger women (2.46%, P=0.38). There was no evidence of a change in the slope of the trend line after the legislation.

By refitting the model with false dates for smoke-free legislation, we found that none of the false dates led to a significant impact in the population as a whole or in men of any age. In women aged over 60, however, modelling with all but one of the false dates from the end of 2005 to 2007 yielded significant results.

Discussion

Hospital admissions for myocardial infarction dropped significantly after the introduction of smoke-free legislation in England. After adjustment for the pre-existing decline in admissions, trends in population size, and seasonal variation in admissions, we found a 2.4% drop in the number of emergency admissions for myocardial infarction after the legislation. This equates to 1200 fewer emergency admissions for myocardial infarction in the first year after the law came into effect (1600 including readmissions).

We identified a smaller reduction than other studies. We believe there are two main explanations for this. Firstly, exposure to secondhand smoke immediately before legislation was substantially lower in England than in other jurisdictions because of marked declines in population exposure in advance of the legislation.50 Secondly, our study methods differed, with potentially better control of confounding.

Exposure before legislation

Smoke-free legislation in England was introduced at a time when many public places and workplaces were already smoke-free. In the year before implementation, a nationally representative survey (ONS Omnibus Survey) indicated that 55% of employed adults in England already worked in a smoke-free environment. In addition, some bars and restaurants, the venues most affected by the legislation, went smoke-free before 1 July. Therefore, despite high compliance with the legislation,51 the decline in smoke exposure and the resulting health benefits of smoke-free legislation that occurred immediately after the implementation of legislation are likely to have been less marked than those observed elsewhere, making them harder to detect in a study such as this. A similar issue was noted in New York, where various pre-existing smoking restrictions were in place.21

Levels of exposure to secondhand smoke were around 50% lower in England than in Scotland just before implementation of legislation in each country, whether measured by concentrations of particulate matter in bars50 or cotinine concentrations (a biochemical marker of smoke exposure) in non-smoking bar workers50 and the general public.52 53 While this might be partly explained by the introduction of legislation in England in summer and in Scotland in winter, the fact that the collection periods for the population data overlap in the two jurisdictions and that greater absolute declines in exposure were seen in Scotland suggest this cannot be the whole explanation.

Data on cotinine concentrations from population surveys indicates that population exposure to secondhand smoke in England has declined markedly since the mid-1990s. From 1993 to 2003 cotinine concentrations almost halved in non-smoking adults living with non-smoking partners and declined by a third in those living with smoking partners.54 In children, for whom more recent data on cotinine are available, there has been a 59% decline in exposure between 1996 and 2006, with the largest annual decline in the year immediately before smoke-free legislation.55 If levels of exposure in adults have continued to decline, in line with those of children, some of the underlying decline in admissions to hospital for myocardial infarction before July 2007 is probably due to reductions in population exposure to secondhand smoke. Moreover, given that some of the decline in exposure is probably attributable to smoke-free legislation either indirectly (for example, through changes in behaviour triggered by growing public debates over secondhand smoke) or directly (public venues going smoke-free in advance of 1 July), studies such as this, designed to detect changes immediately after implementation, will underestimate impacts.

Differences in methods

The second explanation for the more modest decline found in our study relates to differences in methods. Several of the earlier studies used a “before and after” study design, and, although some used geographical controls, they might have been unable to fully account for underlying trends in admissions for myocardial infarction. Given the marked decline observed in admissions from 2002 onwards in our data, consistent with similar declines observed elsewhere,26 27 28 29 30 31 32 this might account for the greater reductions seen in such studies. Moreover, even if the before and after periods of these studies spanned the same months, bias from unseasonal weather patterns and fluctuations in the prevalence of other factors known to influence rates of coronary heart disease might have contributed to the changes observed. By accounting for the underlying decline in emergency admissions for myocardial infarction, seasonal patterns, and other risk factors (which few other studies have controlled for)39 we will produce a more conservative assessment of the contribution of smoke-free public places to reducing the number of emergency admissions. Although this might more accurately reflect the immediate impact of the implementation of the smoke-free law in England, for the reasons identified above, our estimate will miss the contribution of the legislation to the pre-legislative declines in exposure to secondhand smoke and will thus underestimate its full impact.

Validity and age, sex differences

Although our reported impacts were significant (P<0.01 in all but women aged under 60), the confidence intervals were close to the null effect. There is, however, substantial reason for believing the decline in admissions is valid. It is biologically plausible, as outlined above, and robust to the “false dates” analysis in all but older women (discussed below). Moreover, when we imputed smoking prevalence and self reported data on exposure from the Health Survey for England56 into a mathematical model developed by Richiardi et al57 to predict the impact of smoke-free legislation on admissions for myocardial infarction, the predicted reductions in admissions were between 3.6% and 10.9% in men and 2.4% and 7.2% in women. Our results are therefore consistent with the lower estimates obtained from the Richiardi model.57

Impacts were observed in men regardless of age, while in women we found a significant impact only among those aged 60 or over in whom some of the “false dates” also led to significant findings, indicating uncertainty around the impacts in this group. Although many studies do not examine impacts by sex,18 19 20 21 37 the absence of an impact in women was also seen in Rome39 and in four other Italian regions.22 Three issues are worth considering here. Firstly, given that it was only the false dates during the 18 months before the legislation that were significant, this could suggest, in line with the issues raised above, that exposure to secondhand smoke was already declining in women and the false positives might therefore reflect a real, albeit gradual, reduction in myocardial infarction attributable to gradual declines in exposure. Secondly, both pre-legislative levels of, and reductions in, self reported exposure to secondhand smoke were lower in women than men.56 Thirdly, as a result of their low numbers of admissions, there was insufficient power in the analysis of women aged under 60 to detect the small impacts observed in men. Power calculations show that drops between 2-3% can be detected with high power (80%) in all other population subgroups, but in women aged under 60, only reductions greater than 7.5% could be detected with comparable power. As such, we can be confident only that there was no reduction greater than 7.5% in this subgroup. Whatever the reasons, the results in women must clearly be treated with caution.

Limitations

The main weakness of our study, common to most other studies on this topic,18 19 20 21 22 24 25 37 38 39 was that we relied on routine hospital data. Such data do not include the smoking status of patients, and we were therefore unable to determine how much of the decline after the legislation was attributable to reduced exposure to secondhand smoke and how much to reductions in active smoking. This is something we are currently investigating through analysis of another dataset.

Furthermore, definitions of and thresholds for diagnosing myocardial infarction have changed over time,58 but the impact of this on routine records of hospital admissions is not fully understood.59 A redefinition of myocardial infarction occurred in 2000, wherein greater emphasis was placed on the use of specific biochemical markers (notably troponin).60 This was predicted to lead to an increase in the number of diagnosed myocardial infarctions, albeit on a gradual basis as the availability of troponin assays gradually increased.59 Although we observed no marked increase in admissions between 2000 and 2002 nor from 1997 to 2000 (data not shown), we chose to examine data from 2002 onwards to allow for any change in diagnostic threshold to take effect. In this way, and by including a linear predictor for time in our model, we hoped to capture any gradual change that might have occurred as best we could.

Reductions in hospital admissions for myocardial infarction might also be explained by increases in deaths from myocardial infarction outside hospital. Studies in Europe that have examined this issue, however, found a reduction in out of hospital deaths for coronary events accompanying the corresponding decline in admissions,23 39 and this is therefore unlikely to be a concern.

Given that England was the last part of the UK to implement national smoke-free legislation (Scotland in March 2006, Wales and Northern Ireland in April 2007), an assessment of the impact compared with a control population with similar demographics was not feasible. But even if a control population had been available, confounding would not have been completely removed if an unusual event had occurred in only one population.

Aggregating individual admissions data to the national level meant we could consider only national level covariates. This prevented us from including local level covariates, such as temperature and air pollution, in the model.61 62 Although this is unlikely to be a key concern for temperature given the high correlation documented between the Central England Temperature data series and the temperature at individual weather stations,63 it illustrates that residual confounding from unknown factors might remain. Finally, we were able to explore only the short term impact of the legislation, and it is possible that the impact on admissions for myocardial infarctions might vary over time, with two recent reviews suggesting that impacts could increase over time.14 15

Strengths

Despite these concerns, we believe our study has several strengths and advantages over existing studies. With a population of 49 million (2001 census), England is the largest jurisdiction yet to go smoke-free. By using a comprehensive national dataset we were therefore able to provide a study population considerably larger than those of previous studies, which range from 19 million (New York State),21 through 2-5 million (New Zealand,24 parts of Italy,22 25 39 and Scotland23), to less than 200 000 (jurisdictions in US18 19 20 38 and Canada37) and thus to offer greater statistical power to detect an impact in such a short time scale. We estimate that the smallest reduction detectable with a power of 0.8, often considered the desirable level of power, is almost 2%. This is important because other jurisdictions that, like England, have partial smoke-free restrictions in place before comprehensive legislation might be unable to detect changes this small because of their smaller populations and thus sample sizes. Furthermore, the robust segmented Poisson regression analysis, to a greater extent than most previous studies, was able to minimise confounding by accounting for underlying trends in population size and admissions for myocardial infarction and potential confounders such as season, temperature, flu, and holidays.

We therefore conclude that the implementation of smoke-free public places is associated with significant reductions in hospital admissions for myocardial infarction even in jurisdictions with pre-existing smoking restrictions. Given the large number of myocardial infarction events per year, even the relatively small reduction seen in England has important public health benefits.

What is already known about this topic

  • Secondhand smoke increases the risk of acute myocardial infarction

  • Studies from several countries have shown a reduction in hospital admissions for myocardial infarction after the implementation of smoke-free public places but many have failed to adequately account for potential confounders and underlying declines in admissions

What this study adds

  • Even after adjustment for potential confounders and secular trends, there was a small but significant reduction in hospital admissions for myocardial infarction after the introduction of smoke-free legislation in England

  • The smaller fall detected in England, compared with that observed elsewhere, probably reflects both the lower levels of exposure to secondhand smoke before the legislation and the fact that we accounted for underlying declines in admissions for myocardial infarction and other measurable confounders

  • Even a small relative decline in admissions for myocardial infarction can have important public health benefits given the prevalence of coronary heart disease

Notes

Cite this as: BMJ 2010;340:c2161

Footnotes

  • We are grateful to the Association of Public Health Observatories, in particular Bobbie Jacobson, Paul Brown, and Davidson Ho for their support, and to the Health Protection Agency for providing the flu data. The HES data were made available by the NHS Health and Social Care Information Centre. We also thank Alan Kelly and Stephen Babb for their comments on early drafts of this paper.

  • Contributors: AG developed the research proposal and is the principal investigator. AG and MS planned the analysis, drafted and edited the paper, and are guarantors. MS undertook the analysis. RM contributed to data preparation, study design, and editing of the paper. LB contributed to the funding proposal, drafting, and editing of the paper.

  • 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, LB, and AG are members of the UK Centre for Tobacco Control, a UKCRC Public Health Research: Centre of Excellence. Funding from the British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, Economic and Social Research Council, Medical Research Council and the Department of Health, under the auspices of the UK Clinical Research Collaboration is gratefully acknowledged. The funders played no role in the study design, analysis, and interpretation of data nor in the writing of the report or the decision to submit the article for publication.

  • Competing interests: All authors have completed the Unified Competing Interest form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the corresponding author) and declare that all authors had: (1) Financial support for the submitted work as detailed above; (2) No financial relationships with commercial entities that might have an interest in the submitted work; (3) No spouses, partners, or children with relationships with commercial entities that might have an interest in the submitted work; (4) No non-financial interests that may be relevant to the submitted work.

  • Ethical approval: The study was approved by the University of Bath School for Health’s school research ethics approval panel (SREAP).

  • Data sharing: No additional data available.

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References

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