Avoiding “Truth”: Tobacco Industry Promotion of Life Skills Training

To understand why and how two tobacco companies have been promoting the Life Skills Training program (LST), a school-based drug prevention program recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to reduce youth smoking. We analyzed internal tobacco industry documents available online a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of adolescent health 2006-12, Vol.39 (6), p.868-879
Hauptverfasser: Mandel, Lev L., Bialous, Stella Aguinaga, Glantz, Stanton A.
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container_end_page 879
container_issue 6
container_start_page 868
container_title Journal of adolescent health
container_volume 39
creator Mandel, Lev L.
Bialous, Stella Aguinaga
Glantz, Stanton A.
description To understand why and how two tobacco companies have been promoting the Life Skills Training program (LST), a school-based drug prevention program recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to reduce youth smoking. We analyzed internal tobacco industry documents available online as of October 2005. Initial searches were conducted using the keywords “life skills training,” “LST,” and “positive youth development.” Tobacco industry documents reveal that since 1999, Philip Morris (PM) and Brown and Williamson (B&W) have worked to promote LST and to disseminate the LST program into schools across the country. As part of their effort, the companies hired a public relations firm to promote LST and a separate firm to evaluate the program. The evaluation conducted for the two companies did not show that LST was effective at reducing smoking after the first or second year of implementing the program. Even so, the tobacco companies continued to award grants to schools for the program. PM and B&W’s role in promoting LST is part of a public relations strategy to shift the “youth smoking paradigm” away from programs that highlight the tobacco industry’s behavior and toward programs in which the industry can be a partner. Individuals and organizations responsible for developing and implementing tobacco control and youth smoking prevention programs should be aware of PM and B&W’s role and motivations to encourage the wide-spread adoption of LST in schools.
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subjects Addictive behaviors
Adolescent
Adolescents
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Community-Institutional Relations
Education
Educational Programs
Evaluation
Health Promotion - methods
Health Promotion - organization & administration
Health Promotion - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Life skills
Life Style
Medical sciences
Mental health
Motion Pictures
Prevention
Prevention. Health policy. Planification
Preventive programmes
Program Evaluation
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
School Health Services - statistics & numerical data
Smoking
Smoking Prevention
Social psychiatry. Ethnopsychiatry
Tobacco
Tobacco control programs
Tobacco industry
Tobacco Industry - methods
Tobacco smoking
Tobacco, tobacco smoking
Toxicology
West Virginia
Youth
title Avoiding “Truth”: Tobacco Industry Promotion of Life Skills Training
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