“Some convincing arguments to pass back to nervous customers”: the role of the tobacco retailer in the Australian tobacco industry’s smoker reassurance campaign 1950–1978: Figure 1
Open Access
- 26 November 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by BMJ in Tobacco Control
- Vol. 12 (suppl 3) , iii7-iii12
- https://doi.org/10.1136/tc.12.suppl_3.iii7
Abstract
Background:Epidemiological studies and reports on smoking and health published in the 1950s and 1960s threatened the tobacco industry worldwide, which acted to reassure smokers and counteract mounting evidence that smoking posed a serious risk to smokers’ health.Objective:To document the use of tobacco retailers (1) as a conduit to pass messages of reassurance onto smokers, and (2) to recruit youth and women into smoking.Methods:Review of an extensive collection of Australian tobacco retail trade journals (1950–1978) for articles consistent with the industry’s efforts to counter messages about smoking and health, and how to attract non-smokers, particularly youth and women.Results:The main arguments advanced in the journals included the notion that air pollution and other substances cause cancer, that “statistics” did not constitute proof in the tobacco health scare, and that the industry was committed to research into the causes of cancer and into developing a “safer” cigarette.Conclusions:Numerous articles designed to be reiterated to customers were published, arguing against the link between tobacco and ill health. Tobacco retailers, salesmen and retail trade organisations played a significant role in dissembling the tobacco health nexus. Tobacco retail journals may be an important component in tobacco industry misinformation strategies.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- ?Bulletproof skeptics in life's jungle?: which self-exempting beliefs about smoking most predict lack of progression towards quitting?Preventive Medicine, 2004
- Going below the line: creating transportable brands for Australia’s dark marketTobacco Control, 2003
- Failed promises of the cigarette industry and its effect on consumer misperceptions about the health risks of smoking: Table 1Tobacco Control, 2002
- "Operation Berkshire": the international tobacco companies' conspiracyBMJ, 2000
- Lawyer control of the tobacco industry's external research program. The Brown and Williamson documents.1995
- Lawyer Control of the Tobacco Industry's External Research ProgramJAMA, 1995
- Self-exempting beliefs about smoking and health: differences between smokers and ex-smokers.American Journal of Public Health, 1993
- Smokers' beliefs about smoking and healthThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1987
- Smoking and Carcinoma of the LungBMJ, 1950
- TOBACCO SMOKING AS A POSSIBLE ETIOLOGIC FACTOR IN BRONCHIOGENIC CARCINOMAJAMA, 1950