| Literature DB >> 3379485 |
E R Brown1, W J McCarthy, A Marcus, D Baker, J R Froines, C Dellenbaugh, T McQuiston.
Abstract
We surveyed members of a medium-size national union representing workers in high-risk industries to assess workers' support for union and company programs to help smokers break the habit and policies that restrict smoking. Two surveys were conducted that involved 690 respondents in 1984 and 593 respondents in 1985. Respondents overwhelmingly (82%) favored restrictions on smoking in the workplace but less than half agreed that companies or unions should be concerned about workers smoking off the job. For both smokers and nonsmokers, beliefs that cancer has specific causes and can be prevented strongly predict support for workplace smoking control policies. Exposure to company occupational health training also influenced smokers and nonsmokers to support selected smoking control policies. These and other findings led to the conclusion that: (1) educating workers about cancer may promote support for smoking control policies, and (2) smoking control policies are more acceptable in the context of a strong company health and safety program.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1988 PMID: 3379485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Med ISSN: 0096-1736