| Literature DB >> 24228675 |
Lori Dorfman1, Andrew Cheyne, Mark A Gottlieb, Pamela Mejia, Laura Nixon, Lissy C Friedman, Richard A Daynard.
Abstract
Tobacco control's unparalleled success comes partly from advocates broadening the focus of responsibility beyond the smoker to include industry and government. To learn how this might apply to other issues, we examined how early tobacco control events were framed in news, legislative testimony, and internal tobacco industry documents. Early debate about tobacco is stunning for its absence of the personal responsibility rhetoric prominent today, focused instead on the health harms from cigarettes. The accountability of government, rather than the industry or individual smokers, is mentioned often; solutions focused not on whether government had a responsibility to act, but on how to act. Tobacco lessons can guide advocates fighting the food and beverage industry, but must be reinterpreted in current political contexts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24228675 PMCID: PMC3910047 DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2013.301475
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Public Health ISSN: 0090-0036 Impact factor: 9.308