Tobacco smoking will kill literally millions of people annually around the world. Despite this fact, prevalence among young people remains unacceptably high. Because tobacco is so addictive, the typical adolescent smoker can look forward to a lifetime addiction, reduced quality of life and premature death. A long‐term solution to this problem must include action to postpone or inhibit adolescents from taking up smoking. Advertising research indicates that a message is more effective if the target audience experiences a feeling of involvement in it. It must also communicate new, important information that engages the audience at a cognitive and affective level and is readily verifiable against the audience’s own experience. It follows that the threat of addiction should be used as the key message in a campaign to reduce the incidence of adolescent cigarette smoking. This threat is potentially salient for adolescents. It is concrete and immediate, not merely a promise of increased statistical probabilities 30 or more years into the future. It is also readily verifiable from the adolescent’s own experience. It may also be worth focusing on other consequent losses that flow from the addiction.
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1 June 2001
Review Article|
June 01 2001
Forget the “blood and gore”: an alternative message strategy to help adolescents avoid cigarette smoking Available to Purchase
Julian de Meyrick
Julian de Meyrick
Julian de Meyrick is a Lecturer, Marketing Department, Macquarie University, Australia.
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-714X
Print ISSN: 0965-4283
© MCB UP Limited
2001
Health Education (2001) 101 (3): 99–108.
Citation
de Meyrick J (2001), "Forget the “blood and gore”: an alternative message strategy to help adolescents avoid cigarette smoking". Health Education, Vol. 101 No. 3 pp. 99–108, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09654280110387862
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