The effects of tobacco sales promotion on initiation of smoking--experiences from Finland and Norway.

M K Rimpelä, L E Aarø, A H Rimpelä
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Abstract

Norway and Finland were among the first countries to adopt a total ban on tobacco sales promotion. Such legislation came into force in Norway and Finland in 1975 and 1978 respectively. These two countries are sometimes referred to as illustrations that such legislation has been successfully used as a means to reduce tobacco consumption. Tobacco industry spokesmen seem to interpret available evidence in the opposite way and maintain that the prohibition has not contributed to reducing the use of tobacco. Among the publications referred to and misused by tobacco industry spokesmen are publications from the authors of the present report. The effects of a ban on advertising can only be properly examined after describing a reasonable conceptual model. Such a model has to take into account (i) other social and cultural predictors of smoking, (ii) tobacco sales promotion in the contexts of all other mass communication, (iii) control measures other than a ban, and (iv) the degree of success in implementing the ban on advertising. Like any other kind of mass communication tobacco advertising influences the individual in a rather complex way. Behaviour change may be regarded as the outcome of an interpersonal and intrapersonal process. Social science research on tobacco advertising and the effects of banning such advertising has a short history, most studies having been carried out in the late 1980s. After examining available evidence related to the effects of tobacco advertising on the smoking habits of adolescents we conclude as follows: the few scientifically valid reports available today give both theoretical and empirical evidence for a causal relationship. Tobacco sales promotion seems both to promote and to reinforce smoking among young people. The dynamic tobacco market represented by children and adolescents is probably the main target of tobacco sales promotion. In Finland, there have been few studies explicitly addressing the causal links between tobacco sales promotion and the smoking habits of adolescents. In Norway, no such studies have been carried out. If we examine the changes in the use of tobacco over time, the data available do not lend support to the conclusions drawn by the tobacco industry spokesmen. In Norway the prevalence of daily smokers was higher in 1975, when the ban on tobacco advertising came into force than either before or after. The strongest decrease in the prevalence of daily smokers took place during the first five-year period after the ban was introduced.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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烟草促销对开始吸烟的影响--芬兰和挪威的经验。
挪威和芬兰是最早全面禁止烟草促销的国家之一。此类立法分别于 1975 年和 1978 年在挪威和芬兰生效。这两个国家有时被称为成功利用此类立法减少烟草消费的典范。烟草业的发言人似乎从相反的角度解释现有的证据,并坚持认为禁令无助于减少烟草的使用。烟草业发言人提到并滥用的出版物包括本报告作者的出版物。只有在描述了一个合理的概念模型之后,才能对广告禁令的效果进行适当的研究。这种模型必须考虑到:(i) 其他吸烟的社会和文化预测因素;(ii) 在所有其他大众传播背景下的烟草促销;(iii) 禁令以外的控制措施;(iv) 执行广告禁令的成功程度。与任何其他类型的大众传播一样,烟草广告对个人的影响相当复杂。行为改变可被视为人际和人内过程的结果。关于烟草广告和禁止烟草广告的效果的社会科学研究历史不长,大多数研究都是在 20 世纪 80 年代末进行的。在研究了与烟草广告对青少年吸烟习惯的影响有关的现有证据后,我们得出以下结论:目前为数不多的科学有效的报告从理论和经验两方面证明了两者之间的因果关系。烟草促销似乎既促进了青少年吸烟,也强化了青少年吸烟。以儿童和青少年为代表的活跃的烟草市场可能是烟草促销的主要目标。在芬兰,很少有研究明确探讨烟草促销与青少年吸烟习惯之间的因果关系。挪威也没有开展过此类研究。如果我们研究一下烟草使用量随时间推移而发生的变化,现有数据并不支持烟草业发言人得出的结论。在挪威,1975 年烟草广告禁令生效时,每天吸烟者的比例比生效前后都要高。在禁令实施后的第一个五年期间,每日吸烟人数的下降幅度最大。
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