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ARTICLES

Promoting Health (Implicitly)? A Longitudinal Content Analysis of Implicit Health Information in Cigarette Advertising, 1954–2003

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Pages 769-787 | Published online: 19 Nov 2010
 

Abstract

Tobacco studies indicate that health-related information in cigarette advertising leads consumers to underestimate the detrimental health effects of smoking and contributes to their smoking-related perceptions, beliefs, and attitudes. This study examined the frequencies and kinds of implicit health information in cigarette advertising across five distinct smoking eras covering the years 1954–2003. Analysis of 1,135 cigarette advertisements collected through multistage probability sampling of three popular consumer magazines found that the level of implicit health information (i.e., “light” cigarette, cigarette pack color, verbal and visual health cues, cigarette portrayals, and human model–cigarette interaction) in post-Master Settlement Agreement [MSA] era ads is similar to the level in ads from early smoking eras. Specifically, “light” cigarettes were frequently promoted, and presence of light colors in cigarette packs seemed dominant after the probroadcast ban era. Impressionistic verbal health cues (e.g., soft, mild, and refreshing) appeared more frequently in post-MSA era ads than in pre-MSA era ads. Most notably, a majority of the cigarette ads portrayed models smoking, lighting, or offering a cigarette to others. The potential impact of implicit health information is discussed in the contexts of social cognition and Social Cognitive Theory. Policy implications regarding our findings are also detailed.

The authors thank Dr. Dean M. Krugman for allowing us to use his valuable collection of cigarette advertisements for research.

Notes

Note: Numbers in the parenthesis of each item indicate the intercoder reliability.

Note: The first three smoking eras were adopted by King et al. (Citation1991), who conducted a longitudinal analysis of cigarette ads published in 1954 through 1986 issues of magazines, following the analysis of Calfee (Citation1985, Citation1986, Citation1987).

This study extends the antismoking ideology era until 1993 and adds pre- and post-MSA eras to the three eras in King et al. (Citation1991).

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