Wakefield Melanie A, Brennan Emily, Dunstone Kimberley, Durkin Sarah J, Dixon Helen G, Pettigrew Simone, Slater Michael D
Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer, Cancer Council Victoria, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
School of Psychology and Speech Pathology, Curtin University, Bentley, Western Australia, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2017 Apr 20;7(4):e014193. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014193.
To improve the effectiveness of alcohol harm reduction mass media campaigns, this study aimed to (1) identify existing advertisements (ads) with greatest potential to motivate reduced alcohol consumption, (2) assess consistency across audience subgroups in ad effectiveness and (3) identify ad features associated with effectiveness.
Cross-sectional online ad response study with random assignment to view ads.
2174 Australian adult weekly drinkers recruited from an online panel.
Participants were randomly assigned to view three of 83 English-language alcohol harm reduction ads. Each ad was viewed and rated by a mean of 79 participants.
After viewing each ad, participants reported the extent to which they felt motivated to reduce their drinking. Ads were ranked from most to least motivating using predicted means adjusted for demographic characteristics and alcohol consumption. We compared the characteristics of the top-ranked 15% of ads (most motivating) with the middle 70% and bottom 15%.
An ad about the link between alcohol and cancer ('') was most motivating, whereas an ad that encouraged drinking water instead of beer ('') was least motivating. Top-ranked ads were more likely than other ads to feature a 'why change' message and less likely to carry a 'how to change' message; more likely to address long-term harms; more likely to be aimed at the general adult drinking population and more likely to include drinking guidelines. There was substantial overlap in top-ranked ads for younger versus older adults, men versus women and high-risk versus low-risk drinker subgroups.
The effectiveness of alcohol harm reduction campaigns may be improved by directly communicating alcohol's long-term harms to the general adult population of drinkers along with drinking guidelines. By doing so, campaigns can also efficiently influence high-risk drinkers and key demographic subgroups.
为提高减少酒精危害的大众媒体宣传活动的效果,本研究旨在:(1)识别最有潜力促使减少酒精消费的现有广告;(2)评估不同受众亚组在广告效果上的一致性;(3)识别与效果相关的广告特征。
采用随机分配观看广告的横断面在线广告反应研究。
从在线小组招募的2174名澳大利亚成年每周饮酒者。
参与者被随机分配观看83个英文减少酒精危害广告中的三个。每个广告平均由79名参与者观看和评分。
观看每个广告后,参与者报告他们感觉有多大动力减少饮酒。根据针对人口统计学特征和酒精消费进行调整的预测均值,对广告从最具激励性到最不具激励性进行排名。我们将排名前15%(最具激励性)的广告特征与中间70%和底部15%的广告进行了比较。
一则关于酒精与癌症之间联系的广告(“ ”)最具激励性,而一则鼓励喝水而非啤酒的广告(“ ”)最不具激励性。排名靠前的广告比其他广告更有可能呈现“为何改变”的信息,而携带“如何改变”信息的可能性更小;更有可能提及长期危害;更有可能针对一般成年饮酒人群,也更有可能包含饮酒指南。在针对年轻人与老年人、男性与女性以及高风险与低风险饮酒者亚组的排名靠前的广告中存在大量重叠。
通过直接向一般成年饮酒人群传达酒精的长期危害以及饮酒指南,可能会提高减少酒精危害宣传活动的效果。这样做,宣传活动还可以有效地影响高风险饮酒者和关键人口统计学亚组。