MONDAY, July 19 (HealthDay News) -- Point-of-sale tobacco advertising
is a major cause of teen smoking in the United States and should be
banned, Stanford University Medical School researchers say.
These types of tobacco ads in places such as convenience stores, gas
stations and small groceries are highly effective in terms of their impact
on teens and greatly increase the chances that they'll start smoking,
according to Lisa Henriksen, a senior research scientist at the Stanford
Prevention Research Center, and colleagues.
Their survey of 2,110 teens between 11 and 14 years old found that
those who regularly visited stores with point-of-sale tobacco ads were at
least twice as likely to try smoking as those who made infrequent
visits.
"The tobacco industry argues the purpose of advertising is to encourage
smokers to switch brands, but this shows that advertising encourages
teenagers to pick up a deadly habit," Henriksen said in a Stanford news
release.
Point-of-sale advertising in retail outlets accounted for 90 percent of
the tobacco industry's $12.5 billion marketing budget in 2006, according
to the researchers.
Henrikson herself was "surprised by the sheer number of cigarette brand
impressions" -- that is, cigarette ads, tobacco product displays and
cigarette brand-labeled objects such as clocks, trash cans and cash
register mats -- in convenience stores near schools.
"The exposure is unavoidable. It's impossible to miss," she said.
The study appears in the August issue of the journal
Pediatrics.
Henriksen noted that the decline in teenage smoking has leveled off in
recent years. According to federal statistics, high school students who
reported current cigarette use declined sharply from a peak of 36.4
percent in 1997, to 21.9 percent in 2003. Then, the percentage dropped
just a bit to 19.5 in 2009.
"The huge decreases are really starting to slow," she said. "The train
won't continue downhill without further action. Regulating retail
marketing would be ideal for smoking prevention."
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about kids and tobacco.
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