Ha Seung-Hyuk, Lee Gi-Eun, Hwang Jang-Sun, Lee Jang-Han
Department of Psychology, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Department of Advertising and Public Relations, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Front Psychol. 2024 Sep 17;15:1427201. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1427201. eCollection 2024.
The degree of perceived smoking stigma can differ, based on various factors such as gender; this may influence the effect of smoking cessation interventions, including denormalization. This study investigates the gender differences in smoking stigma recognized by Korean smokers and explores the effect of these differences on the success of smoking cessation messages that aim to initiate an identity crisis among smokers. It aims to contribute to effective smoking cessation intervention strategies for female smokers.
The smoker-gender Implicit Association Test (IAT) was used to measure gender-based smoking stigma; the test comprised photos of people smoking, with positive and negative descriptors. Participants were 120 smokers aged 19-35 years (60 males and 60 females). Participants' cognitive attitudes toward smoking and cessation intentions were assessed at baseline. To investigate the effect of social stigmatization on smokers, participants were asked to watch anti-smoking campaigns that stigmatized either smoking behavior or smokers' self-identity. Cognitive attitudes and cessations intention were used to show differences in gender and message conditions.
The IAT D-score showed that female smokers perceived other female smokers significantly more negatively than they did male smokers, suggesting a higher level of smoking stigma. Female smokers in the socially stigmatizing condition reduced their negativity toward smoking less than those who were not stigmatized. Moreover, cessation intentions did not improve when female smokers received identity-threatening messages, indicating that female smokers tended to resist stigmatizing messages.
These findings provide empirical evidence that the gender of Korean smokers is significantly related to differences in smoking stigma. The negative perception and resistance responses of female smokers shown in this study are consistent with the findings of previous studies on the stigma of substance use disorders and addiction. High smoking stigma can also be a risk factor in anti-smoking interventions, including health communication; therefore, these findings should be interpreted with caution.
基于性别等各种因素,感知到的吸烟耻辱程度可能会有所不同;这可能会影响戒烟干预措施的效果,包括去正常化。本研究调查了韩国吸烟者所认识到的吸烟耻辱方面的性别差异,并探讨了这些差异对旨在引发吸烟者身份危机的戒烟信息成功与否的影响。其目的是为针对女性吸烟者的有效戒烟干预策略做出贡献。
使用吸烟者 - 性别内隐联想测验(IAT)来测量基于性别的吸烟耻辱;该测验包括吸烟者的照片以及积极和消极的描述词。参与者为120名年龄在19 - 35岁的吸烟者(60名男性和60名女性)。在基线时评估参与者对吸烟的认知态度和戒烟意愿。为了调查社会污名化对吸烟者的影响,要求参与者观看对吸烟行为或吸烟者自我身份进行污名化的反吸烟运动。认知态度和戒烟意愿用于显示性别和信息条件方面的差异。
IAT D分数表明,女性吸烟者对其他女性吸烟者的负面看法明显多于男性吸烟者,这表明吸烟耻辱程度更高。处于社会污名化条件下的女性吸烟者比未受污名化的女性吸烟者减少对吸烟的负面态度的程度更小。此外,当女性吸烟者收到威胁身份的信息时,戒烟意愿并未改善,这表明女性吸烟者倾向于抵制污名化信息。
这些发现提供了实证证据,表明韩国吸烟者的性别与吸烟耻辱差异显著相关。本研究中女性吸烟者的负面认知和抵抗反应与先前关于物质使用障碍和成瘾耻辱的研究结果一致。高吸烟耻辱也可能是包括健康传播在内的反吸烟干预中的一个风险因素;因此,对这些发现应谨慎解读。