Response to an indigenous smoking cessation media campaign – It's about whānau

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-6405.2008.00310.xGet rights and content
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Abstract

Objective

To assess any effects among Māori (the indigenous people of New Zealand) smokers and their whānau (the traditional Māori family unit) of a campaign designed to support Māori smokers to quit smoking.

Method

New Zealand‐wide cross sectional population surveys between 2000 and 2002 of smokers and whānau pre‐ and post‐airing of the campaign. Measures included recall and awareness of the campaign; perceptions of the campaign; and campaign‐attributed changes in quitting‐related attitudes and behaviours.

Results

Seventy‐eight per cent of smokers and 73% of whānau were able to recall the campaign one year following its launch. The television commercials (TVCs) were consistently rated very believable or very relevant by over half of the smokers who had seen them. More than half of smokers (54%) stated that the campaign had made them more likely to quit.

Conclusion

This nationwide mass media cessation campaign developed to deliver a cessation message to indigenous people was received positively by Māori smokers and their whānau and played a role in prompting quit attempts.

Implications

Social marketing campaigns have an important role as part of a tobacco control program to reduce high smoking prevalence among Māori and inequalities in health outcomes between Māori and other New Zealanders.

Keywords

Smoking cessation
mass media
health services (indigenous)

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