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Published byRichard King Modified over 9 years ago
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Presented by the Y.E.S. Team
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Tobacco companies agreed 10 years ago not to target youth in their advertising, but …
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Youth are still being reached through glamorous images used in movies.
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New research suggests that young people may be influenced to smoke by movies they saw in early childhood.
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Movies rated “G,” “PG” and “PG-13” have almost 80% of smoking scenes.
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The study focused on 2,200 students ages 9 through 12.
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Researchers conducted interviews with children and their parents to track whether the kids had smoked in the past.
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List of Movies Used Rated “PG-13” 40% Rated “R” 40% Rated “PG” 15% Rated “G” 5%
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Smoking Occurrences in Movies Rated “PG-13” 60% Rated “G” and “PG” 19% Rated “R” 21%
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By the third survey: 10% of kids had started to smoke On average viewed about 37 films Average exposure to almost 150 smoking occurrences
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Children who may have seen smoking scenes at a preschool age were as likely to pick up a cigarette as those who had seen such scenes at a later age.
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“Bad language never killed anybody.”
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kids-in-mind.com smokefreemovies.ucsf.edu kids-in-mind.com smokefreemovies.ucsf.edu
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Smoking in movies has doubled since 1982.
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Smoking is NOT glamorous. Yellow teeth and fingers Lip, lung, tongue cancer Wrinkles
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Smoking half pack of cigarettes a day = $1,000 a year.
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Secondhand smoke contains 4,000 chemicals: Carbon monoxide Formaldehyde Chromium Arsenic
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