here - nmsba
Transcription
here - nmsba
NEURO AGAINST SMOKING PROJECT March, 2015 Michal Matukin, NEUROHM – NAS project coordinator 2 Smoking – the worldwide issue a third of global adult population smokes 5 mln 8 mln deaths per year worldwide by 2011 deaths annually estimated by 2030 • more than 600k people die each year from second-hand smoke • only 16% of the world’s population is protected by smoke-free laws e.g. prohibiting smoking in all indoor areas. Source: World Health Organization. WHO Report on the Global Tobacco Epidemic, 2011. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2011 [accessed 2014 Apr 24]. 3 Prevent smoking - save lives • WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) - the most rapidly and widely embraced treaties in UN history – accepted by 180 countries – regulations regarding education & communication – proposed strategies to reduce tobacco demand (enhanced branding) Source: http://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/disease-prevention/tobacco/data-and-statistics/implementation-of-the-who-fctc 4 Plain Packaging – Global Trend? 1st AUSTRALIA December 2013 2nd IRELAND June 2014/ May 2017 3rd UK May 2016 ? Sources of plain packaging: http://www.itmac.ie/other-issues/smoking-in-public-places/useful/plain-packaging/, http://thepackaginginsider.com/plain-packaging-fatty-foods-uk/, http://smokefreeaction.org.uk/news/index.html NMSBA & NEURO AGAINST SMOKING 5 • NMSBA is a great community with many members all around the world • there is a huge potential for neuro methods • pro bono project for a greater good – – – – – to support WHO initiative to promote healthy lifestyle to propagate the tobacco free environment to aid societies and governments in their fight against smoking to bring new valuable insights to the existing discussion on cigarettes warnings. 6 The Power of Unity • First Pilot study showed great potential of NMSBA • Initially 4-6 participants estimated • The response exceeded our wildest expectations; 24 countries participating and 7 countries supporting This is the biggest worldwide study on tobacco health warnings 7 The Power of Unity Research scheme 9 What we tested? WHO recommendations: • Warnings should cover minimum 30% of the package. • Can consist either of text only or text + picture. • Various content – oriented on smokers or smokers and people around them. TEXT ONLY SELF ORIENTED SELF + OTHERS ORIENTED TEXT + PICTURES 10 Whom we tested? • • • • Smoking is described as a pediatric disease more than 88% of current adult smokers began their habit before 18 years of age (SGR 2012) between 80,000 and 100,000 adolescents worldwide start smoking every day 69% of current smokers who want to quit are unable to do so (CDC 2013) Our target group: • • • • young people within their first 3 years of legal age for purchasing cigarettes in a given country. 50% women, 50% men 50% hard smokers - smoke everyday, more than 5 cigarettes per day, 50% light users - don’t smoke everyday, less than 10 cigarettes per week 11 Questions we asked? Whether the WARNING: 1. 2. 3. encourages to quit smoking, is trustworthy, evokes anxiety. If it can influence the perception of SMOKING BEHAVIOR: 1. 2. 3. 4. damages smokers health, harms other people, is addictive, evokes guilt. ? 12 Measures we applied EXPLICIT via declarations NO HARD TO TELL YES 1 2 3 INSTRUCTIONS: . Please indicate if you agree or disagree with presented statement. IS TRUSTWORTHY -1 0 1 no hard to tell yes 14 Measures we applied EXPLICIT via declarations NO HARD TO TELL YES 1 2 3 IMPLICIT via reaction time fast slow 1 Low CERTAINTY 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 High CERTAINTY General results Pictures means more than words for sure 16 all questions EXPLICIT 3 TEXT PICTURES 2,37 2,43 higher evaluation 2 P<0,01* 1 IMPLICIT 9 7 5 3 1 *pairwise t-test, N= 4996 5,45 5,14 P<0,01* more confidence Smokers care more about others than about themselves 17 all questions EXPLICIT 3 SELF OTHERS 2,38 2,42 higher evaluation 2 P<0,01* 1 IMPLICIT 9 7 5 3 1 *pairwise t-test, N= 4996 5,49 5,10 P<0,01* more confidence LET’S TAKE A CLOSER LOOK AT SOME DETAILED FINDINGS Warnings with pictures are percived as TRUSTWORTHY EXPLICIT 3 19 TEXT PICTURES 2,32 2,33 no diff* 2 1 IMPLICIT 9 7 5 3 1 *pairwise t-test, N= 4996 5,64 4,70 P<0,00* more confidence Pictures persuade that smoking DAMAGES HEALTH EXPLICIT 3 20 TEXT PICTURES 2,76 2,76 no diff* 2 1 IMPLICIT 9 7 6,08 5,59 5 3 1 *pairwise t-test, N= 4996 P<0,00* more confidence 21 Implicit enriches explicit insights EXPLICIT was conclusive* in Implicit adds sensitivity and thus allows to find more insights! 33% conclusive 16 countries EXPLICIT + IMPLICIT was conclusive* in 21 countries 67% inconclusive 12% conclusive 88% inconclusive *conclusive means the significant differences between TEXT vs PICTURE and SELF vs OTHERS were observed. Conclusions Pictures make warnings stronger TEXT 23 PICTURES Self + Other persuasion seems to be more effective SELF 24 SELF + OTHERS Implicit enriches explicit insights 25 EXPLICIT via explicit declarations EXPLICIT + IMPLICIT via implicit reaction time conclusive in conclusive in 67% of cases 88% of cases 26 NEXT STEPS 1. Identify the best wording – motives, drivers and blockers regarding smoking behavior – What are the most important motives why people start to smoke? – What are the most effective reasons to persuade quit smoking? 2. Test plain packaging and compare them with the results we already have. 3. Work together on scientific publication to present cross-cultural differences. Source of plain packaging: http://smokefreeaction.org.uk/news/index.html ? 27 Thank You All!