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Mass media and school interventions for cigarette smoking prevention: Effects 2 years after completion

B.S. Flynn, J.K. Worden, R.H. Secker-Walker, P.L. Pirie, G.J. Badger, J.H. Carpenter and B.M. Geller

American Journal of Public Health, 1994, vol. 84, issue 7, 1148-1150

Abstract: The long-term cigarette smoking prevention effects of mass media and school interventions were assessed. Adolescents in two communities received both mass media and school interventions; those in two matching communities received only school interventions. Surveys of 5458 students were conducted at baseline in grades 4 through 6 and 2 years after the 4-year interventions were completed, when students were in grades 10 through 12. Students exposed to the media-plus-school interventions were found to be at lower risk for weekly smoking (odds ratio = 0.62, 95% confidence interval = 0.49, 0.78) than those receiving school interventions only, indicating that the effects of the combined interventions persisted 2 years after the interventions' completion.

Date: 1994
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:aph:ajpbhl:1994:84:7:1148-1150_0

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