Increasing Evidence Points to Link Between Youth Smoking and
Exposure to Smoking in Movies
Adolescents who see smoking depicted in movies are more likely to try smoking,
according to a study funded by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the
National Institutes of Health. The study, which could have broad implications
for efforts to reduce smoking among youth, appears today in the November 2005
issue of the journal Pediatrics*. James Sargent, M.D., of Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Medical Center in Lebanon, N.H., and colleagues are the first to utilize a nationally
representative sample of youth in the United States to examine the influence
of adolescents' exposure to movie smoking on their smoking behavior.
Prior research has established that social influences, such as family and peer
smoking and tobacco advertising, are important determinants of smoking in adolescents.
More recently, research has focused on the impact of smoking in entertainment
— including the effect of celebrities who smoke — on youth smoking.
Sargent and his team studied adolescents ages 10 to 14 and found that youth
had a higher risk of smoking initiation as their exposure to movie smoking increased,
with those youth most exposed to movie smoking being most at risk. Adolescents
with the greatest exposure to movie smoking were 2.6 times more likely to try
smoking than their peers in the least exposed group, after controlling for other
factors. The increased risk of smoking initiation associated with exposure to
smoking in the movies was similar to that of other well-known risk factors, such
as having a parent or sibling who smokes. This increased risk was seen across
youth of all racial and ethnic groups, in all geographic regions of the country.
"This study highlights the significant association between smoking in the movies
and youth smoking,” said Cathy Backinger, Ph.D., acting chief of NCI’s Tobacco
Control Research Branch. "The study reaffirms the need to continue to address
the full range of influences on adolescent smoking.”
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the majority of
adult smokers started smoking before the age of 18, and, each day, nearly 4,000
young people try their first cigarette. “More than 6.4 million children living
today will die prematurely because they started smoking as an adolescent,” said
Backinger. “These statistics demonstrate how crucial it is to address the issue
of adolescent smoking.”
For this research, Sargent and colleagues first analyzed the amount of smoking
depicted in the 500 most popular movies released between 1998 and 2002, as well
as 32 high-grossing movies released in the first four months of 2003. A “smoking
occurrence” was noted when tobacco use was depicted, either by a major or minor
character or in the background. By this standard, smoking occurred in 74 percent
of the movies studied. Researchers then conducted a random telephone survey of
6,522 U.S. adolescents ages 10 to 14. Participants were asked whether they had
seen a random selection of 50 of the 532 analyzed films. The study participants
were also asked, “Have you ever tried smoking a cigarette, even just a puff?” and
those who answered “yes” were classified as having tried smoking. The adolescents
who participated in the study reported having seen an average of 13 movies, leading
to an average exposure to 61 smoking occurrences. Exposure to smoking in movies
was significantly higher among Hispanic and black adolescents than among whites.
“Our findings indicate that all U.S. adolescents, regardless of race or place
of residence, have a higher risk of trying smoking as their exposure to movie
smoking increases," said Sargent. Sargent and his coauthors suggest various approaches
to curbing adolescent exposure to movie smoking, including persuading the movie
industry to voluntarily reduce depictions of smoking and cigarette brands; incorporating
smoking into the movie ratings system to make parents aware of the risks a movie
with smoking poses to the adolescent viewer; and encouraging parents to more
strongly enforce restrictions on youths’ viewing of R-rated movies, which contain
the highest amounts of smoking.
“The findings from this national survey complement other studies that showed
that exposure to smoking in the movies predicts later youth smoking," said Robert
T. Croyle, Ph.D., director of NCI's Division of Cancer Control and Population
Sciences. "Now we need to consider effective ways to reduce youths’ exposure
to this preventable risk factor."
To learn more about tobacco control programs at NCI, please visit NCI's Tobacco
Control Research Branch Web site at http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/.
For more information about cancer, visit the NCI Web site at http://www.cancer.gov or call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4 CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
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