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Past Lessons and New Uses of the Mass Media in Reducing Tobacco Consumption
by
Allan C. Erickson
, Jeffrey W. Mc Kenna
, Rose Mary Romano
in
Activism
/ Advertising as Topic
/ Advocacy
/ Anti smoking movements
/ Bans
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Cigarette smoking
/ Cigarettes
/ Female
/ General aspects
/ Government services
/ Health Promotion - methods
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Mass Media
/ Medical sciences
/ News content
/ Perceptions
/ Planification. Prevention (methods). Intervention. Evaluation
/ Public awareness
/ Public health
/ Public health. Hygiene
/ Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
/ Public service announcements
/ Smoking
/ Smoking - trends
/ Smoking cessation
/ Smoking Prevention
/ Special Section: Health Communication for the 1990s
/ Tobacco
/ United States
/ United States government publications
1990
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Past Lessons and New Uses of the Mass Media in Reducing Tobacco Consumption
by
Allan C. Erickson
, Jeffrey W. Mc Kenna
, Rose Mary Romano
in
Activism
/ Advertising as Topic
/ Advocacy
/ Anti smoking movements
/ Bans
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Cigarette smoking
/ Cigarettes
/ Female
/ General aspects
/ Government services
/ Health Promotion - methods
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Mass Media
/ Medical sciences
/ News content
/ Perceptions
/ Planification. Prevention (methods). Intervention. Evaluation
/ Public awareness
/ Public health
/ Public health. Hygiene
/ Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
/ Public service announcements
/ Smoking
/ Smoking - trends
/ Smoking cessation
/ Smoking Prevention
/ Special Section: Health Communication for the 1990s
/ Tobacco
/ United States
/ United States government publications
1990
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Do you wish to request the book?
Past Lessons and New Uses of the Mass Media in Reducing Tobacco Consumption
by
Allan C. Erickson
, Jeffrey W. Mc Kenna
, Rose Mary Romano
in
Activism
/ Advertising as Topic
/ Advocacy
/ Anti smoking movements
/ Bans
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Cigarette smoking
/ Cigarettes
/ Female
/ General aspects
/ Government services
/ Health Promotion - methods
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Mass Media
/ Medical sciences
/ News content
/ Perceptions
/ Planification. Prevention (methods). Intervention. Evaluation
/ Public awareness
/ Public health
/ Public health. Hygiene
/ Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
/ Public service announcements
/ Smoking
/ Smoking - trends
/ Smoking cessation
/ Smoking Prevention
/ Special Section: Health Communication for the 1990s
/ Tobacco
/ United States
/ United States government publications
1990
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Past Lessons and New Uses of the Mass Media in Reducing Tobacco Consumption
Journal Article
Past Lessons and New Uses of the Mass Media in Reducing Tobacco Consumption
1990
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Overview
A review of mass media response to the smoking issue over the past 25 years reveals that sustained involvement of the broadcast and print media has served significantly to heighten public awareness and reduce smoking rates in the total U.S. population. Public service advertising has been an integral part of the smoking control movement from its outset, but today's intensely competitive media environment has forced health promoters to look beyond public service announcements in the development of total communication programs. Media advocacy--using the media to sharpen public awareness and mold public policy to serve the public interest, a technique derived from political campaigns--is emerging as a powerful tool in the smoking control movement. Its emphasis is on changing the entire social context of tobacco use in America, rather than the smoking behavior of people. Because media advocates' success pivots on their access to the media, they must be able both to create news and to react quickly to breaking news and unexpected events. The opportunistic, risk-taking nature of media advocacy requires that most efforts be waged at the State and local levels. An increasing number of State health departments and other organizations are using paid advertising to improve the frequency and reach of nonsmoking messages. Research verifies that paid media campaigns increase the target audience's exposure to smoking control messages, but planning and making efficient media purchases require sophistication and, of course, the necessary funds. Irrefutable medical evidence linking smoking to disease and addiction, combined with the powerful social force of the nonsmokers' rights movement, offer hope that a smoke-free society is an achievable goal. Success, however, will only be realized if tobacco control activists make use of the full range of mass media technologies to sustain and nourish this momentum.
Publisher
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health,Association of Schools of Public Health,SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC
Subject
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