Young Adults Respond to Graphic Cigarette Warnings

Study findings suggest seeing is believing

THURSDAY, April 9, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Graphic images increase the impact that cigarette warning labels have on young adults in the United States, a new study says.

The study included smokers and non-smokers, ages 18-25, who took part in a nationwide survey that asked how much they learned about the dangers of smoking from cigarette warning labels.

Increasing the awareness of the “true consequences” of smoking may not only encourage people to quit or even never start smoking, “but may actually drive the emotional experience of the label, which we know is an important predictor of motivation,” said study author Renee Magnan, an assistant professor of psychology at Washington State University Vancouver.

The labels used in the study emphasized smoking-related dangers such as lung cancer, heart disease and stroke, impotence, eye disease, and head, neck, throat and mouth cancers.

Some were text-only while others included text and graphic images such as facial scars, rotting teeth, diseased body parts or people dying in hospital beds.

The participants overwhelmingly said that the warning labels with images gave them a much better understanding and more knowledge about the risks of smoking, triggered more worry about the effects of smoking, and did more to discourage smoking, compared to text-only warning labels.

The study was published online in the journal Annals of Behavioral Medicine.

The findings suggest that clearer, more informative warning labels on cigarettes are more likely to be heeded by smokers, Magnan said.

“Although this is a preliminary investigation, from a policy perspective, these outcomes suggest that focusing on deriving greater understanding and knowledge from such labels may have more impact in terms of both motivational and emotional responses,” Magnan said in a university news release.

“Importantly, however, these labels are only a small piece of what should be a larger campaign to educate the public on the dangers of smoking,” Magnan added.

More information

The American Cancer Society offers a guide to quitting smoking.

— Robert Preidt

 

SOURCE: Washington State University, news release, April 7, 2015

 

Be sure to check out our website www.TheTwinDoctors.com and please connect with us on all of our social media outlets at TheTwinDoctors.

About The Docs


Jamil

Idris

TheTwinDoctors.com is the creation of twin OB/Gyn Doctors Jamil and Idries Abdur-Rahman. Jamil (Dr. J) and Idries (Dr. I) were inspired to start TheTwinDoctors.com after participating on season 22 of CBS’ ‘The Amazing Race’.

Read More

Everything You Ever Wanted to
Know About Pregnancy:

But Were Too
Embarrassed or Afraid to Ask

by Idries Abdur-Rahman (Goodreads Author),
Jamil Abdur-Rahman MD, Nikia Bilal (Editor)

Buy Now

Follow us on Twitter

Follow Us On Facebook