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ARTICLES

Perceptions of Smoking Prevalence by Youth in Countries With and Without a Tobacco Advertising Ban

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Pages 656-664 | Published online: 30 Aug 2010
 

Abstract

This study examined a proposed mechanism by which exposure to cigarette advertising may mediate the subsequent smoking of youth. We hypothesized that children's exposure to cigarette advertising leads them to overestimate the prevalence of smoking, and that these distorted perceptions, in turn, lead to increased intentions to smoke. Children in Finland, where there has been a total tobacco advertising ban since 1978, were compared with children in the United States at a time when tobacco advertising was ubiquitous. Samples of 477 8- to 14-year-old Helsinki students and 453 8- to 14-year-old Los Angeles students whose lifetime cigarette use consisted of no more than a puff of a cigarette were administered questionnaires in their classrooms. The primary hypothesis was confirmed. Los Angeles youth were significantly more likely than Helsinki youth to overestimate the prevalence of adult smoking, in spite of the fact that actual adult smoking prevalence in Helsinki was almost twice that of Los Angeles adults. A similar, significant pattern for perceived peer smoking was obtained, with Los Angeles youth being more likely than Helsinki youth to overestimate prevalence, in spite of the actual greater prevalence of youth smoking in Helsinki.

This article was supported by a grant from the National Cancer Institute (#CA35596).

We thank Michael McGourty and Seppo Pelkonen for conducting this study in schools in Los Angeles County and Helsinki, respectively; Hien Lam for assisting with data analyses; Shawn McGinniss for graphics assistance; and Unto Pallonen for translating the study materials from English to Finnish and consulting on relevant cultural issues

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