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Thomas E. Novotny

Researcher at San Diego State University

Publications -  161
Citations -  8499

Thomas E. Novotny is an academic researcher from San Diego State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Tobacco control. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 152 publications receiving 7589 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas E. Novotny include University of California, San Francisco & University of California, San Diego.

Papers
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The reliability of self-reported cigarette consumption in the United States.

TL;DR: It is concluded that cross-sectional surveys of self-reported smoking status remain a reliable surveillance tool for monitoring changes in population smoking behavior.
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Tobacco Product Waste: An Environmental Approach to Reduce Tobacco Consumption.

TL;DR: This article reviews reports on the toxicity of TPW and recommends several policy approaches to mitigation of this ubiquitous environmental blight.
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Global Health Diplomacy

TL;DR: A variety of shifts emergent with globalization are explored as a critical discourse and intervention in global health diplomacy: the expansion in non-governmental organization participation in international health programs, the globalization of science and pharmaceutical research, and the use of militarized languages of biosecurity to recast public health programs.
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Quitting smoking in the United States in 1986.

TL;DR: In an analysis of recent behavior with regard to quitting smoking, detailed histories were obtained on a representative sample of 5,623 Americans who had smoked in the year preceding the 1986 Adult Use of Tobacco Survey and showed that younger age and higher education predicted a major attempt to quit.
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Poverty status and cigarette smoking prevalence and cessation in the United States, 1983-1993: the independent risk of being poor.

TL;DR: Person below the poverty threshold continue to be more likely than those at or above the threshold both to be current smokers and not to have quit, and poverty may be an indicator of underparticipation in the changing social norms regarding smoking behaviour in recent years.