Reactions to Messages about Smoking, Vaping and COVID-19: Two National Experiments.
Monday, December 21, 2020
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Grummon AH, Hall MG, Mitchell CG,
et al
Reactions to Messages
about Smoking, Vaping and COVID-19: Two National Experiments.
Tob Control. 2020 Nov : tobaccocontrol-2020-055956. Published online 2020 Nov
13. doi: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2020-055956
Introduction. The
pace and scale of the COVID-19 pandemic, coupled with ongoing efforts by health
agencies to communicate harms, have created a pressing need for data to inform
messaging about smoking, vaping, and COVID-19. We examined reactions to
COVID-19 and traditional health harms messages discouraging smoking and vaping.
Methods. Participants
were a national convenience sample of 810 US adults recruited online in May
2020. All participated in a smoking message experiment and a vaping message
experiment, presented in a random order. In each experiment, participants
viewed one message formatted as a Twitter post. The experiments adopted a 3
(traditional health harms of smoking or vaping: three harms, one harm, absent)
× 2 (COVID-19 harms: one harm, absent) between-subjects design. Outcomes
included perceived message effectiveness (primary) and constructs from the
Tobacco Warnings Model (secondary: attention, negative affect, cognitive
elaboration, social interactions).
Results. Smoking
messages with traditional or COVID-19 harms elicited higher perceived
effectiveness for discouraging smoking than control messages without these
harms (all p <0.001). However, including both traditional and COVID-19 harms
in smoking messages had no benefit beyond including either alone. Smoking messages
affected Tobacco Warnings Model constructs and did not elicit more reactance
than control messages. Smoking messages also elicited higher perceived
effectiveness for discouraging vaping. Including traditional harms in messages
about vaping elicited higher perceived effectiveness for discouraging vaping (p
<0.05), but including COVID-19 harms did not.
Conclusions. Messages
linking smoking with COVID-19 may hold promise for discouraging smoking and may
have the added benefit of also discouraging vaping.
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