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Cigarette displays encourage teen smoking - ASH survey

Wednesday 23rd July 2008

The more teenagers visit shops where cigarettes are on display, the more likely they are to start smoking, new research by anti-smoking organisation ASH says.

A survey has been conducted among thousands of students around the country each year since 1999.

Last year 27,000 Year 10 students from 238 schools were asked questions which indicated their susceptibility to smoking such as "If your best friend offered you a cigarette, would you smoke it?" and "At any time in the next year do you think you will smoke a cigarette?". With four possible responses, anyone not choosing "definitely not" was deemed at risk.

Researchers found teens who visited shops such as dairies two or three times a week rated twice as likely to start or experiment with smoking than those who visited less than weekly.

"(And) it's a dose response. The more visits they are making the higher the likelihood of that susceptibility to smoking," researcher Dr Janine Paynter told NZPA.

Those who hit the dairy daily recorded three times the risk of the sub-weekly shoppers.

For the full story go to:

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=321&objectid=10519786