Publication | Closed Access
Beliefs, Attitudes, Intentions, and a Smoking-Cessation Program: A Planned Behavior Analysis of Communication Campaign Development
51
Citations
4
References
1990
Year
Stepped Cessation ProgramSmoking-cessation ProgramSocial MarketingHealth PsychologyCommunicationBehavior AnalysisCommunication CampaignsTobacco ControlRisk CommunicationSelf-efficacy TheoryHealth CommunicationPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHealth EducationBehavioral SciencesHealth PolicyTobacco UseExtended TheoryHealth PromotionApplied Social PsychologyHealth CampaignsInterpersonal CommunicationHealth BehaviorCommunication Campaign DevelopmentSocial Psychological TheoryArtsPersuasion
Abstract This study combines insights from research on communication campaigns with a social psychological theory of planned behavior and the Purdue stepped approach model of health-care delivery. This synthesis is applied in a study of beliefs, attitudes, and behavioral intentions and interests with respect to participation in a smoking-cessation program. A telephone survey based on a probability sample of 191 student smokers indicates moderate prepromotional interest in a stepped cessation program. The strongest predictor of intention to participate is attitude toward participation, followed by perceived normative expectation and control belief. Analysis of attitude-relevant beliefs indicates that program promotion must target both expectancies for healthful outcomes of program participation and evaluations of those outcomes. We also discuss the instability of student smoking, self-perceptions of smoking, and self-reports of smoking.
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