Effects Of Smokers’ Recent Cessation Failure on Their Responses to Threat Appeals in Anti-Smoking Ads

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Jungsuk Kang
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0057-5552
Carolyn A. Lin
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4281-4454
Deya Roy
https://orcid.org/0009-0000-7723-6087

Abstract

Background: Quitting smoking often involves multiple cessation attempts before smokers succeed. Recent cessation failure can influence how smokers respond to smoking-related threat appeals in anti-smoking ads that may encourage them to quit smoking. This study aims to investigate the effects of smokers’ recent cessation failure on their responses to smoking-related threat appeals in anti-smoking ads.


Methods: This study conducted a 2 (strong vs. weak verbal threat appeal) x 2 (strong vs. weak visual threat appeal) pretest-posttest experiment online with a smoker segment (Korean male smokers in their 30’s) who had the highest rate of attempted smoking cessation across all gender and age groups in Korea. Participants’ recent cessation failure (quit attempts within the previous 12 months) was measured in pretest session. And their cessation intention and defensive responses (e.g., wishful thinking) were assessed during pretest and posttest sessions.   


Results: For participants with a recent cessation failure (n = 84), anti-smoking ad exposure increased their fatalism and hopelessness. Among participants without a recent cessation failure (n = 41), anti-smoking ad exposure intensified their cessation intention. However, exposure to strong visual threat appeal increased their wishful thinking.


Conclusion: Verbal and visual threat appeals in anti-smoking ads had a differential effect on adaptive (e.g., cessation intention) and maladaptive (e.g., fatalism) responses between smokers with and without a recent cessation failure. Study findings expand our understanding of the empirical linkage between recent cessation failure, smoking prevention messaging in anti-smoking ads and psychological coping mechanism among smokers.

Article Details

How to Cite
Kang, J., Lin, C. A. ., & Roy, D. (2025). Effects Of Smokers’ Recent Cessation Failure on Their Responses to Threat Appeals in Anti-Smoking Ads. Asia Pacific Journal of Health Management, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.24083/apjhm.v20i1.3769
Section
Research Articles
Author Biographies

Jungsuk Kang, Jeonbuk National University, Republic of Korea

Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Jeonbuk National University.
567 Baekje-daero, Deokjin-gu, Jeonju-si, Jeollabuk-do 54896, Republic of Korea

Carolyn A. Lin, Department of Communication, University of Connecticut, USA

Carolyn A. Lin (PhD) is a professor in the Department of Communication, University of Connecticut, USA. Her research and teaching interests focus on marketing, computer-mediated, health, risk, crisis, environmental, science and multicultural communication. She is the founder of the Communication Technology Division at the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication.

Deya Roy, Department of Communication, California State University San Marcos, USA

Deya Roy (PhD) is with the Department of Communication at California State University San Marcos, USA. She is a researcher of interactions between patients and providers, health information seeking behavior and mass media effects of health behaviors. She is particularly interested in the effects of social media usage on health decision making.