Abstract
Introduction Cigar warning labels can serve as health communication tools; yet current cigar warnings in the United States can be small or absent, and efforts to standardize them have met industry resistance, partly because of limited research. Aims and Methods In 2021, we conducted an online 3 × 2 × 2 factorial experiment with 1352 young adults (aged 18-34) past 12-month cigar users. Participants viewed a cigarillo pack image that varied by: text-only warning size (none; small 15%-of-pack label; larger 30%-of-pack label); warning color (White; Black); and brand (Swisher Sweets; White Owl). We compared group means on risk perceptions, knowledge, and intentions. Results Packs with any warning label (vs. none) elicited higher endorsement that the packs made participants think about the health risks of smoking cigarillos (p < .001), as did packs with larger 30%-of-pack versus 15%-of-pack warnings (p < .001). Packs with a warning label (vs. without) elicited greater absolute perceptions of cigarillo harm (p < .001), as did 30%-of-pack versus 15%-of-pack warnings (p < .001). Risks referenced in the stimuli warning (mouth and throat cancer) were more frequently mentioned in an open-ended knowledge item by participants in conditions with a warning label versus the no-warning condition (p < .05). Packs with 30%-of-pack warnings were also rated as less attractive and elicited lower use intentions than packs without a warning or with the 15%-of-pack warning (p
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CITATION STYLE
Wackowski, O. A., Gratale, S. K., Jeong, M., Schroth, K. R. J., Mercincavage, M., Strasser, A. A., & Delnevo, C. D. (2025). The Impact of Cigarillo Text Warning Presence and Size on Young Adults’ Cigarillo Risk Beliefs, Knowledge, Appeal, and Use Intentions. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 27(9), 1607–1615. https://doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntaf074
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