Gagné Lynda
School of Public Administration, University of Victoria, Victoria BC, Canada.
J Health Commun. 2008 Mar;13(2):125-48. doi: 10.1080/10810730701854029.
The effect of the 2005 British Columbia (BC) smoking cessation mass media campaign on a panel (N = 1,341) of 20-30-year-old smokers' attitudes is evaluated. The 5-week campaign consisted of posters, television, and radio ads about the health benefits of cessation. Small impacts on the panel's attitudes toward the adverse impacts of smoking were found, with greater impacts found for those who had no plans to quit smoking at the initial interview. As smokers with no plans to quit increasingly recognized the adverse impacts of smoking, they also increasingly agreed that they use smoking as a coping mechanism. Smokers with plans to quit at the initial interview already were well aware of smoking's adverse impacts. Respondents recalling the campaign poster, which presented a healthy alternative to smoking, decreased their perception of smoking as a coping mechanism and devalued their attachment to smoking. Evidence was found that media ad recall mediates unobserved predictors of attitudes toward smoking.
评估了2005年不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC)戒烟大众媒体宣传活动对一个由1341名20至30岁吸烟者组成的小组态度的影响。为期5周的宣传活动包括关于戒烟对健康益处的海报、电视和广播广告。研究发现,该活动对小组对吸烟负面影响的态度产生了微小影响,对于那些在初次访谈时没有戒烟计划的人影响更大。随着原本没有戒烟计划的吸烟者越来越认识到吸烟的负面影响,他们也越来越认同自己将吸烟作为一种应对机制。在初次访谈时有戒烟计划的吸烟者已经充分意识到吸烟的负面影响。回忆起展示了吸烟健康替代方式的宣传活动海报的受访者,降低了他们将吸烟作为应对机制的认知,并贬低了他们对吸烟的依赖。有证据表明,媒体广告回忆在对吸烟态度的未观察到的预测因素中起中介作用。