Cigarette flavors, package shape, and cigarette brand perceptions: an experiment among young Brazilian women. Rev Panam Salud Publica.
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Rev Panam Salud Publica
Abstract
In 2012, a new Brazilian regulation prohibited the use of flavor additives in
tobacco products. To better understand the potential impact of this regulation, this study exam ines how flavor descriptors on cigarette packaging influence brand perceptions among young
Brazilian women.
Methods. An online cross-sectional experiment was conducted with Brazilian women aged
16–26 (N = 640: 182 smokers and 458 nonsmokers) who rated 10 cigarette packages from one
of three conditions: 1) branded packs; 2) packs with the same size, shape, and verbal descrip tions as in condition 1, but without brand imagery (i.e., “plain pack”); and 3) packs from
condition 2 but without brand descriptors (i.e., “plain pack, no descriptors”). Mixed-effects
linear regression models were utilized to determine what associations that pack features
(i.e., experimental condition; flavor descriptor vs. not; slim pack vs. not) had with participant
ratings of nine characteristics, including appeal, taste, smoothness, and attributes of people
who smoke the brand.
Results. Flavored branded packs were rated as more appealing, better tasting, and smoother than
flavored plain packs with descriptors. Compared to flavored plain packs with descriptors, the
same packs without descriptors were rated less positively on eight of the nine characteristics.
Compared to nonsusceptible nonsmokers, susceptible nonsmokers rated flavored packs more
positively on eight of the nine characteristics. Slim packs were rated more positively than
regular packs on eight of the nine characteristics.
Conclusions. Slim packs and brands highlighting tobacco flavors appear to increase positive
perceptions of tobacco products. Banning tobacco flavorings and slim packs may reduce the
appeal of smoking for young Brazilian women, as well as for other vulnerable populations.