Ledford Victoria A, Cosavalente Hilda Patricia Garcia, Jackson Devlon N, Carter Carter, Saperstein Sandra L, Baur Cynthia, Balaban Ariel, Fish Jessica N
School of Communication and Journalism, Auburn University.
Department of Family Science, University of Maryland.
Health Commun. 2025 May;40(5):822-836. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2024.2370725. Epub 2024 Jun 25.
Research has yet to offer strong recommendations for effective tobacco prevention and cessation messaging that can reduce tobacco-related health disparities among Black and/or Latine LGBTQ+ youth and young adults. As a result of predatory marketing strategies and community stressors, among other factors, LGBTQ+ youth and young adults use tobacco products at higher rates than their non-LGBTQ+ peers. These disparities are uniquely complex among Black and/or Latine youth and young adults within the LGBTQ+ community, but there has been little research addressing the communication strategies that can promote tobacco prevention and cessation for these groups. Given the promise and history of successful health communication campaigns for tobacco control, this research is crucial. We thus conducted a scoping review to identify trends and gaps in the empirical research published from 2002-2022 that analyzed tobacco prevention and cessation communication strategies for Black and/or Latine LGBTQ+ youth and young adults (ages 12-30) living in the United States. Despite an initial search query of 3,182 articles after deleting duplicates, only five articles were eligible for inclusion, three of which evaluated the campaign. Accordingly, we view our scoping review as an almost empty review. Although our results offer preliminary insight into messaging strategies used in these campaigns, our larger contribution is to expose the scarcity of tobacco-related communication research being conducted among Black and/or Latine LGBTQ+ communities. Given the marginalization these communities face, we issue a call to action for researchers and campaign designers and offer a series of suggestions for future research.
对于有效的烟草预防和戒烟宣传信息,研究尚未给出强有力的建议,而这些信息本可以减少黑人和/或拉丁裔 LGBTQ+青年及年轻成年人中与烟草相关的健康差异。由于掠夺性营销策略和社区压力源等因素,LGBTQ+青年及年轻成年人使用烟草产品的比例高于非LGBTQ+同龄人。在LGBTQ+社区中的黑人和/或拉丁裔青年及年轻成年人中,这些差异尤为复杂,但针对能促进这些群体进行烟草预防和戒烟的沟通策略的研究却很少。鉴于成功的烟草控制健康宣传活动的前景和历史,这项研究至关重要。因此,我们进行了一项范围综述,以确定2002年至2022年发表的实证研究中的趋势和差距,这些研究分析了针对居住在美国的12至30岁黑人和/或拉丁裔 LGBTQ+青年及年轻成年人的烟草预防和戒烟沟通策略。尽管在删除重复项后最初搜索到3182篇文章,但只有五篇文章符合纳入标准,其中三篇评估了该活动。因此,我们认为我们的范围综述几乎是一项空白综述。虽然我们的结果为这些活动中使用的宣传策略提供了初步见解,但我们更大的贡献是揭示了在黑人和/或拉丁裔 LGBTQ+社区中进行的与烟草相关的沟通研究的稀缺性。鉴于这些社区面临的边缘化状况,我们呼吁研究人员和活动设计者采取行动,并为未来的研究提供一系列建议。