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  Vol. 157 No. 7, July 2003 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Modifying Exposure to Smoking Depicted in Movies

A Novel Approach to Preventing Adolescent Smoking

James D. Sargent, MD; Madeline A. Dalton, PhD; Todd Heatherton, PhD; Mike Beach, MD, PhD

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2003;157:643-648.

Background  Most behavioral approaches to adolescent smoking address the behavior directly. We explore an indirect approach: modifying exposure to portrayals of smoking in movies.

Objectives  To describe adolescents' exposure to smoking in movies and to examine factors that could modify such exposure.

Design  Occurrences of smoking were counted in each of 601 popular movies. Four thousand nine hundred ten northern New England junior high school students were asked to report which movies they had seen from a randomly generated subsample of 50 films, and responses were used to estimate exposure to the entire sample.

Analysis  The outcome variable was exposure to movie smoking, defined as the number of smoking occurrences seen. Risk factors for exposure included access to movies (movie channels, videotape use, and movie theater); parenting (R [restricted]-rated movie restrictions, television restrictions, parenting style); and characteristics of the child (age, sex, school performance, sensation-seeking propensity, rebelliousness, and self-esteem). We used multiple regression to assess the association between risk factors and exposure to movie smoking.

Results  Subjects had seen an average of 30% of the movie sample (interquartile range, 20%-44%), from which they were exposed to 1160 (interquartile range, 640-1970) occurrences of smoking. In a multivariate model, exposure to movie smoking increased (all P values <.001) by about 10% for each additional movie channel and for every 2 videos watched per week. Exposure increased by 30% for those going to the movie theater more than once per month compared with those who did not go at all. Parent restriction on viewing R-rated movies resulted in a 50% reduction in exposure to movie smoking. There was no association between parenting style and exposure to movie smoking. Much of the protective effect of parent R-rated movie restriction on adolescent smoking was mediated through lower exposure to movie smoking.

Conclusions  Adolescents see thousands of smoking depictions in movies, and this influences their attitudes and behavior. Exposure to movie smoking is reduced when parents limit movie access. Teaching parents to monitor and enforce movie access guidelines could reduce adolescent smoking in an indirect, yet powerful, manner.


From the Departments of Pediatrics (Drs Sargent and Dalton) and Anesthesia (Dr Beach) and the Norris Cotton Cancer Center (Drs Sargent and Dalton), Dartmouth Medical School, and the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College (Dr Heatherton), Hanover, NH.



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Exposure to Smoking Depictions in Movies: Its Association With Established Adolescent Smoking
Sargent et al.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2007;161:849-856.
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Out of the smokescreen II: will an advertisement targeting the tobacco industry affect young people's perception of smoking in movies and their intention to smoke?
Edwards et al.
Tobacco Control 2007;16:177-181.
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Prevalence of smoking among major movie characters: 1996-2004
Worth et al.
Tobacco Control 2006;15:442-446.
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Parental Rules and Monitoring of Children's Movie Viewing Associated With Children's Risk for Smoking and Drinking
Dalton et al.
Pediatrics 2006;118:1932-1942.
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Smoking in the Movies Increases Adolescent Smoking: A Review
Charlesworth and Glantz
Pediatrics 2005;116:1516-1528.
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Exposure to Movie Smoking: Its Relation to Smoking Initiation Among US Adolescents
Sargent et al.
Pediatrics 2005;116:1183-1191.
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Effect of Parental R-Rated Movie Restriction on Adolescent Smoking Initiation: A Prospective Study
Sargent et al.
Pediatrics 2004;114:149-156.
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Journal Watch
Arch. Dis. Child. 2003;88:1136-1137.
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Is the Big Screen Going Up in Smoke?
JWatch Pediatrics 2003;2003:3-3.
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