Article

Impact of standardised packaging in the UK on warning salience, appeal, harm perceptions and cessation-related behaviours: A longitudinal online survey

Details

Citation

Moodie C, Best C, Hitchman SC, Critchlow N, MacKintosh AM, McNeill A & Stead M (2021) Impact of standardised packaging in the UK on warning salience, appeal, harm perceptions and cessation-related behaviours: A longitudinal online survey. Tobacco Control. https://doi.org/10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2021-056634

Abstract
Introduction In the UK, since 20 May 2017, tobacco companies must sell cigarettes and rolling tobacco in standardised packs. Methods Three waves of a longitudinal online survey with smokers (≥16) before standardised packaging (wave 1 (W1): April to May 2016) and after standardised packaging (wave 2 (W2): September to November 2017; wave 3 (W3): May to July 2019). Of the 6233 smokers at W1, 4293 responded at W2 and 3175 at W3. We explored smokers’ response to warning salience, appeal (appeal, quality, value, satisfaction and taste compared with a year ago), harm (harmfulness compared with a year ago, harm compared with other brands and whether some brands have more harmful substances), and quit plans, attempts and quitting. Results Compared with W1, the proportions noticing warnings first on packs, and rating cigarettes/rolling tobacco less appealing and worse value than a year ago, were higher at W2 and W3. Disagreeing that some brands contain more harmful substances was higher at W2. Interactions between social grade and survey wave for warning salience, and each appeal and harm outcome, were non-significant. Smokers switching from not noticing warnings first at W1 to noticing warnings first at W2, or who had a lower composite appeal score at W2, were more likely to plan to quit and to have made a quit attempt at W2. Smokers who switched to disagreeing that some brands contain more harmful substances at W2, after giving a different response at W1, were more likely to quit at W3. Conclusions Standardised packaging appears to be having the intended impacts.

Keywords
Standardised Packaging; Warnings; Appeal; Harm; Policy; Longitudinal

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming/Available Online

Journal
Tobacco Control

StatusIn Press
FundersDepartment of Health, National Institute for Health Research, British Heart Foundation and Cancer Research UK
Publication date online16/07/2021
Date accepted by journal22/06/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/33035
ISSN0964-4563
eISSN1468-3318

People (4)

People

Dr Catherine Best

Dr Catherine Best

Lecturer Statistician, Institute for Social Marketing

Dr Nathan Critchlow

Dr Nathan Critchlow

Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

Ms Anne Marie MacKintosh

Ms Anne Marie MacKintosh

Senior Researcher, Institute for Social Marketing

Professor Crawford Moodie

Professor Crawford Moodie

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Projects (1)