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Journal Article

Citation

Grummon AH, Ruggles PR, Greenfield TK, Hall MG. Am. J. Prev. Med. 2023; 64(2): 157-166.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.amepre.2022.09.006

PMID

37575887

PMCID

PMC10421534

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: New warning labels for alcohol could reduce alcohol-related health harms. This study examined consumer responses to alcohol warnings with different designs.

METHODS: A national sample of 3,051 U.S. adults completed an online survey in August 2021. Participants were randomized to 1 of 4 warning topics (addiction, liver damage, early death, or colon cancer). Participants viewed 3 labels, presented in random order: 2 types of warning labels (text-only and icon) showing a newly developed warning message about their assigned topic and a text-only control label showing a neutral message. Participants rated each label on effectiveness at discouraging alcohol consumption (primary outcome) and attention (secondary outcome) using 1 to 5 Likert-type scales. Participants also rated warnings with different causal language variants (e.g., "increases risk of," "contributes to") and marker words (e.g., "WARNING," "SURGEON GENERAL WARNING").

RESULTS: Both the text-only and icon warnings were perceived as more effective (Average Differential Effects [ADEs]=0.79 and 0.86, respectively) and more attention-grabbing (ADEs=0.43 and 0.69, respectively) than control labels (all ps<0.001). The icon warnings were rated as more effective and attention-grabbing than the text-only warnings (ADEs=0.07 and 0.27, respectively, both ps<0.001). Although all warning topics outperformed the control messages, warnings about addiction were rated as less effective and attention-grabbing than the other topics. A majority (60%) of participants selected "increases risk of" as the most discouraging causal variant and a plurality (47%) selected "SURGEON GENERAL WARNING" as the most discouraging marker word.

CONCLUSIONS: New alcohol warnings could discourage alcohol consumption, especially if warnings include icons.


Language: en

Keywords

Adult; Humans; Surveys and Questionnaires; *Alcohol Drinking/adverse effects/prevention & control; *Product Labeling

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