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. 2016 May 27;2016(5):CD011856. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011856.pub2

Dickert 2015.

Methods Country: USA, New Jersey
Setting: Prisons
Design: Uncontrolled before‐and‐after study
Analysis: Annual and semi‐annual mortality rates. Boot strap analysis of the correlations between tobacco sales and mortality rates using Proc Survey Select in SAS
Participants 13 prisons, N = 23,000 prisoners
Mortality rates for all and mortality rates for subgroup with mental illness assessed
Review of records Jan 2005 to June 2014
Median total term for the NJDOC’s prisoners 6 yrs, median age is 34 yrs. 60% of prisoners are black, 23% white, 16% Hispanic and 1% Asian
Persons placed on the special needs roster account for approx. 13% of the total prison population; this includes all prisoners with a serious mental illness
Interventions NJDOC policy decision for tobacco‐free prisons, including grounds 2012
13th Feb 2013 policy to ban sales and use of all tobacco products for employees, visitors and prisoners enacted
Outcomes Effect of tobacco‐free prison policy on mortality rates in all prisoners and in those with mental illness
Notes National Ban: Yes.
New Jersey’s Smoke‐Free Air Act prohibits smoking in enclosed indoor spaces (2006). March 2010, an amendment banned the use of electronic smoking devices in indoor public places and workplaces and the sale to people 19 years and younger
Biochemical Verification: No
Follow‐up period: 1½ years
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) High risk Not applicable
Allocation concealment (selection bias) High risk Not applicable
Sampling bias (selection bias) Low risk Data collection from a defined population
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) 
 All outcomes Unclear risk Not applicable, accessing national data set
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk Not applicable
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk Expected outcomes reported
Selective reporting (reporting bias) Low risk Expected outcomes reported
Other bias Unclear risk Aggregate data. No individual patient data
No comorbidities
No SHS exposure
Consumption not accurate as cigarettes traded in prison
Differences in length of sentences
Transit of prisoners
Change of diet to healthy heart between 2005 and 2007 implemented in prisons