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Movie Stars Smoking On Screen Encourages Teen Smoking
Excerpts from: Pictures of Puffing Stars
Encourages Teen Smoking
By Alison McCook Reuters [06/29/04]
Associated Press - Tuesday, October
18, 2005; Page A18
Watching a favorite movie star smoke appears to encourage teen
girls to adopt the habit themselves, according to new findings
released Tuesday.
Investigators found that girls who said their favorite celebrity
was someone who had smoked in at least two recent movies were almost
twice as likely to start smoking within the next three years as
girls whose favorite stars did not smoke in films.
"Really, smoking in movies is just an effective form of
marketing," study author Dr. John Pierce told Reuters Health.
Pierce, based at the University of California in San Diego, added
that it is also common for teens to copy their favorite stars'
clothing, hair and jewelry. Those habits are easy to alter as styles
evolve, he said, but once teens become hooked on smoking, "that is
something that's very hard to change."
Pierce noted that the tobacco industry has argued that it does
not pay for actors to smoke on screen, and actors do it simply
because it makes them feel more comfortable.
If that is the case, then one could argue that the stars
themselves are responsible for encouraging teens to smoke, and
should be held accountable for that, Pierce noted.
To investigate whether watching stars smoke on-screen influences
teens to do the same, Pierce and his colleagues asked 3104
never-smokers between the ages of 12 and 15 to name their two
favorite female stars and two favorite male movie stars.
The researchers reviewed the stars' movies during the past 3
years, and counted them as smokers if they puffed during at least
two films. They then re-interviewed teens three years later, to see
how many had started smoking.
When Pierce and his team first contacted teens in 1996, the most
popular stars among teen girls were Brad Pitt, Sandra Bullock and
Leonardo DiCaprio. Favorite actors for boys were Pamela Anderson,
Sandra Bullock and Demi Moore. More than 40 percent of girls and 30
percent of boys had favorite stars who smoked.
Favorite stars who did not smoke on-screen included Jim Carrey,
Tom Hanks and Tom Cruise.
Although girls appeared to be influenced by the smoking habits of
favorite stars, boys were not, the authors report in the American
Journal of Public Health.
Pierce explained that his team also measured each child's
susceptibility to smoking -- defined as being unwilling to rule out
the option of future smoking. This removed the possibility that only
those who were susceptible to smoking would have a favorite star who
smoked on-screen, he said.
Dr. Stanton Glantz of the University of California in San
Francisco, who was not an author of the paper, noted that research
shows that the more teens see people smoke, the more likely they are
to pick up the habit. The latest findings suggest that policymakers
should strictly limit teens' exposure to on-screen smoking, he said
click here to view this study from the American Journal of Public
Health
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