Article

Perceptions of novel warnings compared with currentwarning on tobacco packs, and warnings on cigarette sticks:A cross-sectional survey of college students in Southern India

Details

Citation

Mullapudi S, Kulkarni M, Kamath V, Britton J, Moodie C & Kamath A (2023) Perceptions of novel warnings compared with currentwarning on tobacco packs, and warnings on cigarette sticks:A cross-sectional survey of college students in Southern India. Tobacco Induced Diseases, 21 (April). https://doi.org/10.18332/tid/160082

Abstract
INTRODUCTION In India there is insufficient knowledge of the risks associated with tobacco use. Increasing awareness of these risks is critical, with pictorial warnings on tobacco packs a cost-effective way to communicate this information. We explored perceptions of the current warning, ‘Tobacco causes cancer’, displayed on packs in India and four novel warnings about other potential impacts of tobacco use including social, financial, and environmental, but also complications with diabetes. As loose cigarette sales are common in India, we also explored perceptions of warnings on cigarette sticks. METHODS A cross-sectional survey of college students aged ≥18 years in Karnataka, India, was conducted between January 2019 and February 2020. Participants were asked about salience, believability, and cognitive processing of warnings currently on packs. They were then shown an image of one current and four novel warnings and asked about their perceived effectiveness in preventing uptake and reducing and stopping tobacco use. They were then asked about warnings on cigarette sticks. RESULTS Most participants (70.2%) recalled warnings on packs and considered them believable (55.7%), but only 12.0% read and 12.4% thought about them often. Warnings about the health impacts of tobacco use were viewed as most effective in preventing uptake, and reducing and stopping tobacco use. Nevertheless, at least a third of participants rated warnings pertaining to financial, social, and environmental impacts effective in preventing uptake, and reducing and stopping tobacco use. Approximately one-fifth (22.0%) thought that warnings on cigarette sticks would deter initiation. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that health warnings are perceived as most effective in discouraging tobacco use among college students in Karnataka. While viewed as less effective than health warnings, novel non-health related messages were viewed as effective in preventing uptake, and reducing and stopping tobacco use by at least one in three participants. Warnings on cigarette sticks may help complement warnings on cigarette packs.

Keywords
survey; packaging; cigarettes; warnings

Journal
Tobacco Induced Diseases: Volume 21, Issue April

StatusPublished
FundersMRC Medical Research Council
Publication date30/04/2023
Publication date online28/04/2023
Date accepted by journal24/12/2022
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36104
PublisherE.U. European Publishing
eISSN1617-9625

People (1)

Dr Catherine Best

Dr Catherine Best

Associate Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

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