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Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers

Health warning labels (HWLs) on alcohol containers may help reduce population-level alcohol consumption. However, few studies have examined the most effective formats for alcohol HWLs. This study tested the effects of three different types of alcohol HWLs. In an online experiment, N = 1,755 Australi...

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Autores principales: Brennan, Emily, Dunstone, Kimberley, Vittiglia, Amanda, Mancuso, Sam, Durkin, Sarah, Slater, Michael D., Hoek, Janet, Pettigrew, Simone, Wakefield, Melanie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9729007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36476743
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0276189
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author Brennan, Emily
Dunstone, Kimberley
Vittiglia, Amanda
Mancuso, Sam
Durkin, Sarah
Slater, Michael D.
Hoek, Janet
Pettigrew, Simone
Wakefield, Melanie
author_facet Brennan, Emily
Dunstone, Kimberley
Vittiglia, Amanda
Mancuso, Sam
Durkin, Sarah
Slater, Michael D.
Hoek, Janet
Pettigrew, Simone
Wakefield, Melanie
author_sort Brennan, Emily
collection PubMed
description Health warning labels (HWLs) on alcohol containers may help reduce population-level alcohol consumption. However, few studies have examined the most effective formats for alcohol HWLs. This study tested the effects of three different types of alcohol HWLs. In an online experiment, N = 1,755 Australian adult drinkers were randomly assigned to one of five conditions: (a) No HWL control; (b) DrinkWise control (industry-developed labels currently on some containers); (c) Text-Only HWLs; (d) Text + Pictogram HWLs; or (e) Text + Photograph HWLs. In the three intervention conditions, participants were exposed to eight HWLs, each depicting a different long-term harm. Exposure occurred during an initial session, and repeatedly over the subsequent eight days. Differences between conditions were assessed immediately following initial exposure and at nine-day follow-up. Compared to participants in the No HWL control, participants exposed to Text + Pictogram HWLs were more likely to have intentions to avoid drinking alcohol completely in the next month (post-exposure) and intentions to drink less alcohol in the next week (follow-up), and participants in all three intervention conditions reported stronger negative emotional arousal (follow-up) and weaker positive emotional arousal (follow-up). Compared to participants in the DrinkWise control, those exposed to Text + Pictogram HWLs had stronger intentions to drink less alcohol in the next week and intentions to avoid drinking alcohol completely in the next month (follow-up), participants in the Text + Photograph condition reported significantly weaker positive emotional arousal, and all three intervention conditions resulted in stronger negative emotional arousal. There would likely be benefits to public health if any of the three types of intervention HWLs were implemented. However, there is some evidence that Text + Pictogram HWLs should be recommended over Text-Only or Text + Photograph HWLs, given they were the only HWLs to increase intentions to drink less.
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spelling pubmed-97290072022-12-08 Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers Brennan, Emily Dunstone, Kimberley Vittiglia, Amanda Mancuso, Sam Durkin, Sarah Slater, Michael D. Hoek, Janet Pettigrew, Simone Wakefield, Melanie PLoS One Research Article Health warning labels (HWLs) on alcohol containers may help reduce population-level alcohol consumption. However, few studies have examined the most effective formats for alcohol HWLs. This study tested the effects of three different types of alcohol HWLs. In an online experiment, N = 1,755 Australian adult drinkers were randomly assigned to one of five conditions: (a) No HWL control; (b) DrinkWise control (industry-developed labels currently on some containers); (c) Text-Only HWLs; (d) Text + Pictogram HWLs; or (e) Text + Photograph HWLs. In the three intervention conditions, participants were exposed to eight HWLs, each depicting a different long-term harm. Exposure occurred during an initial session, and repeatedly over the subsequent eight days. Differences between conditions were assessed immediately following initial exposure and at nine-day follow-up. Compared to participants in the No HWL control, participants exposed to Text + Pictogram HWLs were more likely to have intentions to avoid drinking alcohol completely in the next month (post-exposure) and intentions to drink less alcohol in the next week (follow-up), and participants in all three intervention conditions reported stronger negative emotional arousal (follow-up) and weaker positive emotional arousal (follow-up). Compared to participants in the DrinkWise control, those exposed to Text + Pictogram HWLs had stronger intentions to drink less alcohol in the next week and intentions to avoid drinking alcohol completely in the next month (follow-up), participants in the Text + Photograph condition reported significantly weaker positive emotional arousal, and all three intervention conditions resulted in stronger negative emotional arousal. There would likely be benefits to public health if any of the three types of intervention HWLs were implemented. However, there is some evidence that Text + Pictogram HWLs should be recommended over Text-Only or Text + Photograph HWLs, given they were the only HWLs to increase intentions to drink less. Public Library of Science 2022-12-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9729007/ /pubmed/36476743 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0276189 Text en © 2022 Brennan et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Brennan, Emily
Dunstone, Kimberley
Vittiglia, Amanda
Mancuso, Sam
Durkin, Sarah
Slater, Michael D.
Hoek, Janet
Pettigrew, Simone
Wakefield, Melanie
Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers
title Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers
title_full Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers
title_fullStr Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers
title_full_unstemmed Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers
title_short Testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: An online experimental study with Australian adult drinkers
title_sort testing the effectiveness of alcohol health warning label formats: an online experimental study with australian adult drinkers
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9729007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36476743
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0276189
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