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HEA Anti-Smoking Campaign - UK
This project of the Health Education Authority (HEA) focused on a multimedia campaign against smoking, and was aimed at youth aged 16-24. The campaign was hard hitting as it showed real life examples of smoking-related diseases, evidence youth often find difficult to dismiss. This £2.4m project was launched in December, 1998 and ran until March 1999 in response to the governments white paper on tobacco.
Communication Strategies
Six television and 12 radio advertisements feature people in their thirties or forties who display the effects of smoking. Also, a series of advertisements in women's consumer magazines depict cigarettes in cosmetics as a way to address the way smoking can affect the skin. Also developed were the Smoking Cessation Guidelines for Health Professionals for interventions in routine clinical care.
Development Issues
Smoking, youth, health.
Key Points
This campaign is based on research that indicated that youth in this age bracket find it hard to dismiss the health risks of smoking when presented with real-life examples of smoking related diseases. The Smoking Cessation Guidelines reflect the aspect of the campaign directed at health care workers who can directly interact with patients on a respectable level. Health workers are to assess the smoking status of patients at every opportunity, advise and assist all smokers to stop, or refer them to specialist cessation services such as NRT.
Partners
Health Education Authority
Sources
Health Education Authority News Bulletin: February 1999. Pages 1 and 4, also Healthlines Magazine: Feb. 99, Issue 59, page 4
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