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Health Education & Behavior
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Mass Media for Smoking Cessation in Adolescents

Laura J. Solomon, PhD

University of Vermont, Burlington, laura.solomon{at}uvm.edu

Janice Y. Bunn, PhD

University of Vermont, Burlington

Brian S. Flynn, ScD

University of Vermont, Burlington

Phyllis L. Pirie, PhD

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

John K. Worden, PhD

University of Vermont, Burlington

Takamaru Ashikaga, PhD

University of Vermont, Burlington

Theory-driven, mass media interventions prevent smoking among youth. This study examined effects of a media campaign on adolescent smoking cessation. Four matched pairs of media markets in four states were randomized to receive or not receive a 3-year television/radio campaign aimed at adolescent smoking cessation based on social cognitive theory. The authors enrolled 2,030 adolescent smokers into the cohort (n = 987 experimental; n = 1,043 comparison) and assessed them via annual telephone surveys for 3 years. Although the condition by time interaction was not significant, the proportion of adolescents smoking in the past month was significantly lower in the experimental than comparison condition at 3-year follow-up when adjusted for baseline smoking status. The media campaign did not impact targeted mediating variables. A media campaign based on social cognitive constructs produced a modest overall effect on smoking prevalence among adolescents, but the role of theory-based constructs is unclear.

Key Words: smoking cessation • adolescents • mass media

This version was published on August 1, 2009

Health Education & Behavior, Vol. 36, No. 4, 642-659 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1090198106298421


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