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Cross sectional study of young people's awareness of and involvement with tobacco marketing

Lynn MacFadyen, +2 more
- 03 Mar 2001 - 
- Vol. 322, Iss: 7285, pp 513-517
TLDR
Teenagers are aware of, and are participating in, many forms of tobacco marketing, and both awareness and participation are associated with current smoking status, suggesting that the current voluntary regulations designed to protect young people from smoking are not working, and that statutory regulations are required.
Abstract
Objectives: To examine young people's awareness of and involvement with tobacco marketing and to determine the association, if any, between this and their smoking behaviour. Design: Cross sectional, quantitative survey, part interview and part self completion, administered in respondents' homes. Setting: North east England. Participants: Stratified random sample of 629 young people aged 15 and 16 years who had “opted in” to research through a postal consent procedure. Results: There was a high level of awareness of and involvement in tobacco marketing among the 15–16 year olds sampled in the study: around 95% were aware of advertising and all were aware of some method of point of sale marketing. Awareness of and involvement with tobacco marketing were both significantly associated with being a smoker: for example, 30% (55/185) of smokers had received free gifts through coupons in cigarette packs, compared with 11% (21/199) of non-smokers (P<0.001). When other factors known to be linked with teenage smoking were held constant, awareness of coupon schemes, brand stretching, and tobacco marketing in general were all independently associated with current smoking status. Conclusions: Teenagers are aware of, and are participating in, many forms of tobacco marketing, and both awareness and participation are associated with current smoking status. This suggests that the current voluntary regulations designed to protect young people from smoking are not working, and that statutory regulations are required.

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Tobacco Industry Promotion of Cigarettes and Adolescent Smoking

TL;DR: These findings provide the first longitudinal evidence to the authors' knowledge that tobacco promotional activities are causally related to the onset of smoking.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brand logo recognition by children aged 3 to 6 years. Mickey Mouse and Old Joe the Camel.

TL;DR: Very young children see, understand, and remember advertising and the exposure of children to environmental tobacco advertising may represent an important health risk and should be studied further.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of Tobacco Marketing and Exposure to Smokers on Adolescent Susceptibility to Smoking

TL;DR: The hypothesis that tobacco marketing may be a stronger current influence in encouraging adolescents to initiate the smoking uptake process than exposure to peer or family smokers or sociodemographic variables including perceived school performance is supported.
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RJR Nabisco's cartoon camel promotes camel cigarettes to children.

TL;DR: Old Joe Camel cartoon advertisements are far more successful at marketing Camel cigarettes to children than to adults, consistent with tobacco industry documents that indicate that a major function of tobacco advertising is to promote and maintain tobacco addiction among children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does tobacco advertising target young people to start smoking? Evidence from California.

TL;DR: Perception of advertising is higher among young smokers; market-share patterns across age and sex groups follow the perceived advertising patterns; and changes in market share resulting from advertising occur mainly in younger smokers.
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