DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Background-The average child spends as
much time viewing movies and television as he spends in school. Tobacco use is
ubiquitous in movies, yet its impact on adolescent smoking has not been studied
before. We hypothesize that exposure to tobacco use in movies is a causal
element in the initiation of adolescent smoking. Preliminary Work- Our 4-year
study resulted in a content analysis measuring the amount and context of
tobacco use in over 600 popular contemporary movies. We found tobacco
depictions in 95 percent of the movies and brand appearances in 28 percent. We
linked these data with responses from a cross-sectional study of over 5000 5th
- 8th grade students. In a multivariate analysis, adolescent exposure to
tobacco use in movies was associated with adolescent smoking and, among never
smokers, it was associated with attitudes that predict future smoking. Specific
Aims-The goal of this proposal is to better understand the relationship between
viewing tobacco use in movies and adolescent smoking. To accomplish this, we
plan to continue the content analysis of popular contemporary films through the
year 2005 and conduct a two-year longitudinal telephone survey of a nationally
representative sample of 3000 adolescents. This survey will enable us to
describe adolescents' exposure to tobacco use in contemporary films over time
and to determine if this exposure predicts smoking uptake. Methods-Adolescents
will be surveyed semiannually about their smoking status, exposure to a sample
of recently released popular movies, and a number of other factors related to
adolescent smoking. Each survey will contain a unique subset of movies,
randomly selected from top box-office hits and video rentals released within
six months prior to the survey. The primary outcome will be the transition from
never smoker to experimenter. Secondary analyses will be conducted to examine
whether exposure to movie tobacco use influences attitudes among never smokers
and influences experimenters to become established smokers. We will also
evaluate differences in movie exposure among whites, African Americans, and
Latinos. Significance- This is the first prospective study to evaluate the
public health implications of depicting tobacco use in movies. Because our
study involves a nationally representative sample of U.S. adolescents, data
from this survey will enable us to determine the number of cases of youth
smoking in the United States that are attributable to exposure to tobacco use
in popular, contemporary movies.
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