Implementing bans on the advertising, promotion, and sponsorship of tobacco products is linked to 20% lower odds of smoking, and 37% lower risk of taking up the habit, reveals a pooled data analysis ...
Tobacco companies use covert marketing tactics and exploit loopholes in Australian tobacco control laws to promote their products despite current tobacco advertising bans, finds new research from ...
You smell it before you see it. A creeping odor that foretells of tar-ridden lungs. The wrinkled toxic sticks that foreshadow one's future death bed. It’s responsible for 480,000 deaths per year in ...
Mid-century cigarette ads did more than sell tobacco. They sold emotional safety through white coats, calm language, and… The ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) — A statewide campaign called "It's Not Just" is aimed at menthol-flavored tobacco marketing that targets African American communities. "What we know to be true is that 85 percent ...
ZHONGSHAN CITY, GUANGDONG PROVINCE, CHINA, February 9, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- The global cigarette display ...
Cigarette advertising and promotions are most likely to lure teens whose parents follow otherwise well-proven methods for discouraging risky behavior, according to a new study. Although teens with ...
THE nation’s cigarette manufacturers have been under increasing fire since the U.S. Surgeon General reported in 1964 that “cigarette smoking contributes substantially to mortality.” The Surgeon ...
Carolyn Holbrook receives funding from the Australian Research Council. This research was supported by Australian Research Council Linkage grant LP210100204, 'Cancer Culture: Understanding Anti-Cancer ...
People who identify as lesbian, gay and bisexual – particularly women – respond more positively to tobacco marketing, are more inclined to smoke cigarettes daily and may have a more difficult time ...
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco has been quietly offering a low-cost PC and Net access package to Doral smokers--signaling a long-anticipated move onto the Web by cigarette advertising powerhouses. R.J.