While the overall smoking rate in Minnesota has dramatically decreased, certain communities, such as communities of color, American Indians, immigrants and refugees, LGBTQ community members, and people with mental illness and substance use disorders have much higher rates of commercial tobacco use, leading to disparities in secondhand smoke exposure and risk for and incidence of smoking related-disease and death. These health inequities stem from cultural/social norms around commercial tobacco use; the targeting of these communities by the tobacco industry through misinformation and predatory marketing tactics; and lack of funding for tobacco prevention efforts—especially for those that utilize effective, culturally specific approaches.  The Communities Eliminating Tobacco Inequities (CETI) initiative aimed to reduce commercial tobacco use in communities by supporting community-driven, culturally specific efforts that raise awareness, shift cultural/social norms and/or influence organizational and local public policy.

Read the evaluation report here. (Download)