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Research and Practice |
1 Department of Population Health, University of Wisconsin
2 Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention and Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: niederdeppe{at}wisc.edu.
| Abstract |
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Objectives. We examined whether the impact of televised smoking cessation ads differed by a populations education and income.
Methods. We used longitudinal data from the Wisconsin Behavioral Health Survey, a statewide sample of 452 adult smokers who were interviewed in 2003 to 2004 and followed up 1 year later. Logistic regression was used to assess whether baseline recall of secondhand smoke ads and "keep trying to quit" ads was associated with quit attempts and smoking abstinence at 1 year. Interaction terms were used to assess whether these associations differed by the smokers education and income levels.
Results. Overall, neither keep-trying-to-quit nor secondhand smoke ad recall was associated with quit attempts or smoking abstinence. Keep-trying-to-quit ads were significantly more effective in promoting quit attempts among higher- versus lower-educated populations. No differences were observed for secondhand smoke ads by the smokers education or income levels.
Conclusions. Some media campaign messages appear less effective in promoting quit attempts among less-educated populations compared with those who have more education.
Key Words: Health Education, Media, Socioeconomic Factors, Smoking Cessation, Tobacco Control, Tobacco
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