aarogya.com in Marathi | Gujarati
22 Specialties
News and Updates
Home arrow News and Updates arrow Surrogate ads luring kids to smoking: Study
Message Board
Download our free toolbar
Ask the Doctor
PDF Print Home Back E-mail this page
 

Surrogate ads luring kids to smoking: Study

Disclaimer: The news story on this page is the copyright of the cited publication. This has been reproduced here for visitors to review, comment on and discuss. This is in keeping with the principle of ‘fair dealing’ or ‘fair use’. Visitors may click on the publication name, in the news story, to visit the original article as it appears on the publication’s website.

Times of India
31 May 2008
New Delhi, India
By Kounteya Sinha

Surrogate ads luring kids to smoking Surrogate ads luring kids to smoking
Surrogate tobacco ads are now luring India’s young–10 to 14–yearolds–to take up smoking.

A recent Indo–US study, conducted in Delhi and Tamil Nadu which included 11,642 sixth and eighth graders, found that nearly 50% of the kids had seen and remembered a tobacco advertisement.

Over 490 of the students surveyed from 32 schools had a favourite tobacco ad while 238 of them could recall a brand name. Current use of tobacco was five times lower among students who had not watched tobacco promotions.

According to the study, published in the May issue of the ‘American Journal of Health Behavior’, which shows a clear connection between exposure to surrogate tobacco ads and consumption, cigarette companies are now trying to tap the youngest population by falsely associating use of tobacco products with qualities such as glamour, energy and sex appeal. This finding has serious implications for India, 51% of whose population is below the age of 25.

Monika Arora, director of Hriday and one of the researchers, told TOI that event sponsorships and lifestyle stores named after tobacco products were slipping through the cracks of the law in India which banned tobacco ads in 2004.

The threat has now made the WHO focus this year’s ‘World No Tobacco Day’ on May 31 on the sophisticated marketing campaigns of tobacco companies to attract the young.

“This study provides solid evidence that tobacco advertising and promotion are associated with tobacco use among urban youth. Smoking initiation largely occurs before 18 years and this study highlights that younger adolescents are more vulnerable. Therefore, the government needs to enforce a comprehensive ban on tobacco ads”, Arora said.

The study’s principal investigator Cheryl Perry, from the University of Texas School of Public Health, said, “As India becomes more westernised, more teens will use tobacco. The sixth graders as a group are already thinking that smoking is cool.”

Meanwhile, WHO on Friday urged governments to protect the world’s 1.8 billion young people by imposing a ban on all tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship. Studies have shown that almost a quarter of smokers in south–east Asia start using tobacco before the age of 10. “In many countries, over 50% of minors have purchased tobacco products from stores and 70% have never been refused due to their age. Tobacco use among girl students is on the rise. It is clearly proven that exposure to direct and indirect advertising leads to an increase in tobacco use among young people”, said Dr. Samlee Plianbangchang, WHO regional director for south–east Asia.

Quote this article in website  Favoured  Related articles  Save this to del.icio.us 
Users' Comments  RSS feed comment  |  Average user rating     (0 vote)

Name
E-mail
Title  
Comment
 
Available characters: 600
 
  Mathguard security question:
265         3A3      
  5    O      9   SMD
S5B   R3R   SNU      
T      S    1     OPP
OGG         TLK      
   
   

No comment posted

Login
Newsletters
Name:
Email:
feed image
Top
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Feedback  |  Disclaimer  |  SiteMap  |  Invite Your Friends  |  © 2008 www.aarogya.com. All Rights Reserved. | T-Edge Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
This site is best viewed on IE 7.0/ Netscape 7.0/ Mozilla 2.0 or higher versions of these browsers on a screen resolution of 1024 × 768 pixels and above.