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Persistent
electronic warnings push some Smokers to
quit
Newswise — Go ahead. Nag, nag, nag. It might
do some good after all.
The more smokers worry about health risks,
the more they will contemplate quitting,
according to a new study in the latest issue
of the journal Annals of Behavioral
Medicine. Warning messages create worry that
can nudge smokers down that road, the
researchers concluded.
“We didn’t set out with the goal of trying
to get people to quit,” said Renee Magnan, a
psychologist at the University of New
Mexico. The idea was to prompt smokers to
think about it. “The more we can do to get
them motivated, the better.”
Magnan and colleagues recruited 119 smokers,
with an average age of 26. Half were
students at North Dakota State University
and the others were from the neighboring
Fargo community.
During a meeting, researchers told
participants that the experiment was about
communicating smoking-related information.
The researchers said they would not ask
smokers to quit, but smokers would receive
messages on a personal digital assistant
(PDA) eight times a day during the first
week and six times a day the second week.
Researchers divided the smokers into two
groups. For one group, the messages focused
on various hassles — stress and money, for
example.
The other group received antismoking
messages, some of which described how it
affects nonsmokers when someone else smokes
or how smoking can lead to wrinkles and
yellow teeth.
However, Magnan said the messages with more
influence concerned serious health effects.
The most worrisome was, “93 percent of lung
cancer patients die within five years.”
More than half of participants getting
serious antismoking messages reported trying
to quit during the intervention.
Comparatively, about 19 percent of smokers
in the other group said they tried to quit.
The research highlights an “innovative way
to expose people to these messages,” said
Danielle McCarthy, a clinical psychologist
at Rutgers University.
“Worry seems to be part of what’s
important,” she added.
The issue of how to warn smokers about
health risks is a concern for researchers.
“There is some good evidence to the complete
ineffectiveness of our current warning
labels,” McCarthy said. “Larger warnings are
better. That’s one piece of the puzzle.”
Magnan, who was involved with the study
while doing graduate work in North Dakota,
said the evidence could move researchers to
learn more about how often to expose smokers
to such messages.
“Also,
it’s entirely likely that the type of smoker
is important. It may work best for smokers
who are thinking about quitting,” she said.
“It may help them move from thinking to
doing.”
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