Longitudinal effects of cigarette pictorial warning labels among young adults

被引:0
作者
Andrea C. Johnson
Samuel J. Simmens
Monique M. Turner
W. Douglas Evans
Andrew A. Strasser
Darren Mays
机构
[1] University of Pennsylvania,Department of Psychiatry and Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science, Perelman School of Medicine
[2] George Washington University,Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Milken Institute School of Public Health
[3] Michigan State University,Department of Communication
[4] George Washington University,Prevention and Community Health Department, Milken Institute School of Public Health
[5] The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center,Department of Internal Medicine, Wexner Medical Center, Center for Tobacco Research
来源
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2022年 / 45卷
关键词
Cigarettes; Addiction; Prevention; Public health; Marketing; Tobacco Control;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Young adults are influenced by cigarette package marketing. Pictorial warning labels are a recommended intervention. Evidence demonstrates pictorial warnings impact negative emotion, risk perceptions, and motivation to quit smoking, but there is limited research on their effects over time. This study analyzes data from a randomized trial of young adult smokers (N = 229) exposed to a pictorial or text-only cigarette warning. We assessed changes in fear, anger, risk perceptions, and motivation to quit smoking after 4 weeks using latent change score modeling and over 3 months using latent growth modeling. Latent change results showed exposure was associated with increases in fear, anger, and motivation to quit after 4 weeks. Latent growth showed exposure was associated with increases in motivation to quit smoking over 3 months, but not other outcomes. Findings suggest pictorial warning labels produce an emotional response and increase motivation to quit among young adult smokers.
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页码:124 / 132
页数:8
相关论文
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