reviewTobacco ControlMay 23, 2011BRONZE OA

Health warning messages on tobacco products: a review

University of Waterloo

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

To review evidence on the impact of health warning messages on tobacco packages. DATA SOURCES: Articles were identified through electronic databases of published articles, as well as relevant 'grey' literature using the following keywords: health warning, health message, health communication, label and labelling in conjunction with at least one of the following terms: smoking, tobacco, cigarette, product, package and pack. STUDY SELECTION AND DATA EXTRACTION: Relevant articles available prior to January 2011 were screened for six methodological criteria. A total of 94 original original articles met inclusion criteria, including 72 quantitative studies, 16 qualitative studies, 5 studies with both qualitative and qualitative components, and 1 review paper: Canada (n=35), USA (n=29) Australia (n=16), UK (n=13), The Netherlands (n=3), France (n=3), New Zealand (n=3), Mexico (n=3), Brazil (n=2), Belgium (n=1), other European countries (n=10), Norway (n=1), Malaysia (n=1) and China (n=1).

Results

The evidence indicates that the impact of health warnings depends upon their size and DESIGN: whereas obscure text-only warnings appear to have little impact, prominent health warnings on the face of packages serve as a prominent source of health information for smokers and non-smokers, can increase health knowledge and perceptions of risk and can promote smoking cessation. The evidence also indicates that comprehensive warnings are effective among youth and may help to prevent smoking initiation. Pictorial health warnings that elicit strong emotional reactions are significantly more effective.

Citation impact

1,151
total citations
FWCI
30.50
Percentile
100%
References
103
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Advertising
  • Business
  • Tobacco product
  • Environmental health
  • Internet privacy
  • Medicine
  • Computer science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding