UPenn TCORS: Information and Misleading Information about Tobacco Products in the "New" and "Old" Public Communication Environment
Principal Investigator: Robert Hornik
Funding Mechanism: National Institutes of Health- TCORS Grant
ID number: 1P50CA179546-01
Award Date: 9/18/2013
Institution: University of Pennsylvania
Public communications about tobacco products – including pro-tobacco messages promulgated by manufacturers, anti-tobacco public education messages, and communications shared on social media – can influence public opinion and behavior. This prospective, repeated measure, observational study will examine information and misinformation about tobacco products in traditional and emerging media and how exposure to this information alters beliefs, attitudes, intentions, and tobacco use in a nationally representative sample of 10,800 youth and young adults aged 13-25. Specific aims are: (1) to conduct a content analysis that characterizes "opportunities for exposure" to anti- and pro-tobacco product and smoking information presented in traditional and emerging social media over 36 months, for the total study population as well as for subgroups defined by age, socioeconomic status, gender, race/ethnicity, and smoking status; and (2) to conduct 36 monthly telephone surveys evaluating whether variation in anti- and pro-tobacco message content is associated with attitudes and beliefs about tobacco products, and whether exposure to pro-tobacco content predicts subsequent tobacco beliefs, attitudes and use. By describing tobacco message themes and developing tools to monitor the traditional and emerging communication environment, this project may inform the FDA's efforts to communicate effectively about tobacco products.
UPENN: Tobacco Product Messaging in a Complex Communication Environment (TCORS) Related Resoures
- UPENN TCORS: Tobacco Product Messaging in a Complex Communication Environment (TCORS)
- Project 2: Belief Echoes: Interventions to Correct Misleading Information about Tobacco Products
- Project 3: Effects of Implicit Messaging by Cigarette Pack Color on Smoking Behaviors
- The original scientific abstract and other project information can be found on the NIH website