Nicotine - Stigma: Difference between revisions

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*Public health campaigns that stigmatize smoking can backfire, according to a study published Monday, leading some people to become so angry and defensive that they refuse to quit and others feeling so bad about themselves that they give up trying.
*Public health campaigns that stigmatize smoking can backfire, according to a study published Monday, leading some people to become so angry and defensive that they refuse to quit and others feeling so bad about themselves that they give up trying.
*Smokers reported feeling shame, guilt and embarrassment for their smoking behavior and used words such as “leper,” “outcast,” “bad person,” “low-life” and “pathetic” to describe themselves, the study found. These feelings increased after failed attempts to quit smoking.
*Smokers reported feeling shame, guilt and embarrassment for their smoking behavior and used words such as “leper,” “outcast,” “bad person,” “low-life” and “pathetic” to describe themselves, the study found. These feelings increased after failed attempts to quit smoking.
=='''Studies, Papers, Reports - Stigma, Smoking, and Lung Cancer (People Who Use Nicotine)'''==
=='''Studies, Papers, Reports - Stigma, Smoking, and Lung Cancer (People Who Use Nicotine)'''==


=='''Studies, Papers, Reports - Employment and/or Insurance (People Who Use Nicotine)'''==
=='''Studies, Papers, Reports - Employment and/or Insurance (People Who Use Nicotine)'''==