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ASH Australia OTCC Auckland September 2007 A media-advocacy strategy.

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Presentation on theme: "ASH Australia OTCC Auckland September 2007 A media-advocacy strategy."— Presentation transcript:

1 ASH Australia OTCC Auckland September 2007 A media-advocacy strategy

2 ASH Australia Stafford Sanders, Communications Officer Presenter / co-author Anne Jones, Chief Executive Co-author Eddie Hertz, Sociology student, Macquarie University Research and production assistance

3 Outline Myth vs reality The problem Changes needed Campaign strategy Supporters Usefulness of the strategy Results / progress Conclusions / lessons

4 Myth vs reality View of some politicians / advisers: Smoking “informed adult lifestyle choice” We’ve gone far enough, any further is “nanny state” Reality: Smoking normally arises from childhood recruitment & addiction Tobacco industry targets children as “new smokers” Too many children smoke Too many children exposed to secondhand smoke

5 The problem Continued high (but falling) child smoking rates 140,000 + (9%) of Australian students 12-17 smoke at least weekly (NDS 2005) Easy availability of tobacco to children - 23% get it from shops - 35,000+ dealerships Retail display predisposes children to smoke – - they see it as more normal, accessible ( Wakefield et al 2006) Child staff still selling - potential impact on both child seller and customer Children at risk from SHS in cars ( Rees et al 2006)

6 Supermarket, newsagent, convenience store: just three of 35,000 tobacco dealerships Pics: ASH, Smokefree Tasmania Children in the sights of tobacco promotion

7 Changes needed Tobacco products out of sight in all retail outlets No staff under 18 to sell tobacco Full implementation of licensing scheme for tobacco retailers - fees to fund seller education and compliance Cars carrying children to be smokefree by law

8 Tobacco out of sight: How it CAN be done

9 Campaign strategy Advocacy kit - factsheets, research, photos; 6min DVD - resources adaptable by state groups Countering shonky retailer arguments - displays “ not advertising ”, don ’ t encourage smoking - use of good research; advertising expert input Endorsements and actions - from health, children’s, church, community orgs Political advocacy with state/territory MPs - in alliance with state-based health groups, churches Industry action - retailer meetings, shareholder activism Media - releases, interviews; help with local orgs’ media Strategic use of research Webpage – action emails to supermarket execs

10 Supporters gathered (so far) ASH Australia; Alcohol and other Drugs Council of Australia; Association for the Welfare of Child Health; Australian and New Zealand Society of Respiratory Science; Australian Childhood Foundation; Australian Council of Social Service; Australian Council of State School Organisations; Australian Council on Smoking and Health; Australian Education Union; Australian Foster Care Association; Australian General Practice Network; Australian Lions Drug Awareness Foundation; Australian National Council on Drugs; Australian Parents’ Council; Australian Youth Affairs Coalition; Children’s Cancer Institute Australia; Cystic Fibrosis Australia; Early Childhood Australia; Murdoch Children’s Research Institute; National Association for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect; National Asthma Council Australia; Heart Foundation; Public Affairs Commission of the Anglican Church of Australia; Public Health Association of Australia; Royal Australasian College of Physicians; Royal Australian College of General Practitioners; Rural Doctors Association of Australia; Save the Children Australia; SIDS and Kids; Smarter than Smoking; Telethon Institute for Child Health Research; Australian Lung Foundation; Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand (33 national organisations) + state endorsements (AMA, Cancer Councils, Tas churches)

11 Usefulness of strategy ASH resources used or adapted in various forms by state-based health groups. Their feedback (SA, Qld, Tas, WA): ASH resources & advocacy “helpful”, “significant,” “a useful adjunct to local efforts”

12 Results / progress Retail display - No fully out-of-sight policy achieved anywhere in Aust - Qld, SA, Tas (before parl ’ t): limited to 1 sq. m - Qld, NSW: under review Child staff - No ban yet on underage sellers; but - Coles, Woolworths ’ policy is now that no under-18 staff are to sell tobacco Licensing - SA, Tas, ACT have licensing but ? full implementation Smokefree cars - SA: in effect from 31/5/07 - Tas: before parliament - Qld, ACT, NSW: considering

13 Conclusions / lessons Incremental impact Better on smokefree cars issue - where no powerful lobby against it Limited success on out-of-sight policy, and underage selling - because of strong retailers ’ lobby against Important to counter retailers and build support before reviews - Denormalisation strategies


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