Nicotine - Stigma: Difference between revisions
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*"Presenters at the conference promoted the benefits of implementing the IASLC Language Guide, which emphasises the importance of using person-first language (eg, using patient or participant rather than subject, and person with active tobacco use rather than smoker), eliminating blame language (using unable to comply rather than non-compliant), and ending stigma (such as noting a person who does not smoke rather than a non-smoker)." | *"Presenters at the conference promoted the benefits of implementing the IASLC Language Guide, which emphasises the importance of using person-first language (eg, using patient or participant rather than subject, and person with active tobacco use rather than smoker), eliminating blame language (using unable to comply rather than non-compliant), and ending stigma (such as noting a person who does not smoke rather than a non-smoker)." | ||
===2023: [https://filtermag.org/smoker-person-first-language/ Is It Time to Abandon the Term “Smoker”?]=== | ===2023: Filter: Article: [https://filtermag.org/smoker-person-first-language/ Is It Time to Abandon the Term “Smoker”?]=== | ||
*It’s exactly that stigma that society has attached to the word—leaving little room for nuance or reinvention in the fixed, judgemental glare of a label—that’s prompting growing numbers to move away from its use. | *It’s exactly that stigma that society has attached to the word—leaving little room for nuance or reinvention in the fixed, judgemental glare of a label—that’s prompting growing numbers to move away from its use. | ||