This study examined effective strategies to communicate with parent smokers about the risks of secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure to children. An online, between-subjects experimental survey was administered via TurkPrime Panels to recruit participants (N = 623) comprising adult smokers living with children (aged 0–15). Participants were assigned to messages conditions that differed by message recommendation (cessation; cessation+exposure reduction) and format (video; text-only) or to a no-message control. Participants in a message condition viewed a message, and all participants responded to questions about their perceptions and intentions. Parent smokers who viewed either message recommendation reported greater harm perceptions (p
CITATION STYLE
Sontag, J. M., Delnevo, C. D., Hegyi, T., Ostfeld, B. M., & Wackowski, O. A. (2020). Secondhand Smoke Risk Communication: Effects on Parent Smokers’ Perceptions and Intentions. Journal of Health Communication, 25(7), 554–565. https://doi.org/10.1080/10810730.2020.1797947
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