American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Volume 35, Issue 2 , Pages 95-102, August 2008

Exposure to Smoking Imagery in Popular Films and Adolescent Smoking in Mexico

  • James F. Thrasher, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina
    • Departamento de Investigacion sobre Tabaco, Centro de Investigaciones en Salud Póblacional, Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública, Cuernavaca, México
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence and reprint requests to: James F. Thrasher, PhD, Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior, University of South Carolina, 800 Sumter Street, Room #215, Columbia SC 29208.
  • ,
  • Christine Jackson, PhD

      Affiliations

    • RTI International, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
  • ,
  • Edna Arillo-Santillán, MA

      Affiliations

    • Departamento de Investigacion sobre Tabaco, Centro de Investigaciones en Salud Póblacional, Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública, Cuernavaca, México
  • ,
  • James D. Sargent, MD

      Affiliations

    • Noris Cotton Cancer Center, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, New Hampshire

Background

Exposure to smoking imagery in films is consistently associated with smoking behavior and its psychological antecedents among adolescents in high-income countries, but its association with adolescent smoking in middle-income countries is unknown.

Methods

In 2006, a cross-sectional sample of 3876 Mexican adolescents in secondary school was surveyed on smoking behavior, smoking risk factors, and exposure to 42 popular films that contained smoking. Participants were classified into quartiles of exposure to smoking imagery across all films they reported having seen. Models were estimated to determine associations among quartiles of film-smoking exposure, smoking behavior, and the psychological antecedents of smoking, adjusting for age, gender, sensation seeking, self-esteem, parental smoking, sibling smoking, best-friend smoking, having a bedroom TV, and private versus public school attendance. Analyses were conducted in 2007.

Results

Adolescents were exposed to an average of 51.7 (SE=1.3) minutes of smoking in the films they viewed. Crude and adjusted ORs indicated positive associations between quartiles of film-smoking exposure and both current smoking (AOR4v1=3.13; p<0.0001) and having ever smoked (AOR4v1=2.42; p<0.0001). Data from never-smokers (n=2098) were analyzed to determine associations between film-smoking exposure and psychological antecedents of smoking uptake. Crude and adjusted coefficients indicated significant, positive associations between exposure and susceptibility to smoking (AOR4v1=1.66; p<0.05); favorable attitudes toward smoking (Adjusted B4v1=0.44; p<0.0001); and perceived peer prevalence of smoking (Adjusted B4v1=0.26; p<0.0001).

Conclusions

Exposure to smoking in films appears associated with smoking among Mexican adolescents. Policies could aim to decrease youth exposure to smoking in nationally and internationally distributed films.

 

 The full text of this article is available via AJPM Online at www.ajpm.online.net; 1 unit of Category-1 CME credit is also available, with details on the website.

PII: S0749-3797(08)00413-3

doi:10.1016/j.amepre.2008.03.036

American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Volume 35, Issue 2 , Pages 95-102, August 2008