blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Health News

 

D'oh! Simpsons may promote smoking
Posted: 01 June 2009 1913 hrs

  The Simpsons
 
Photos  of

   
 


MELBOURNE : Long-running US cartoon show "The Simpsons" may inadvertently promote smoking with its frequent depictions of the habit and references to cigarettes, Australian research has found.

While smoking may be responsible for Krusty the Clown's heart condition and sisters Patty and Selma's raspy voices, the show may promote tobacco use simply by showing it in so many episodes, the research concluded.

University of Sydney public health specialist Guy Eslick examined instances of smoking in the first 18 seasons of the show about the dysfunctional family from Springfield, trawling through some 400 episodes in all.

He found that smoking was depicted 795 times over the 18-season period, featuring in a negative context 35 per cent of the time, positive two per cent and neutral 63 per cent.

Most of the time, 63 per cent, the characters shown smoking were adults, although children and teenagers featured in eight per cent of references, with the rest made up of nicotine-addicted animals.

Eslick said cartoon characters had been shown to be effective tools in marketing cigarettes to children, citing the long-running Joe Camel campaign in the United States.

He said research had also shown that the more children were exposed to cigarettes in movies and on television, the more likely they were to take up the habit.

"In conclusion, it is clear that smoking is a frequent event on The Simpsons television show, and that even instances of smoking being reflected in a negative way, particularly among child and adolescent characters, could have an impact in prompting children to smoke cigarettes," Eslick concluded.

The research was published in the Medical Journal of Australia Monday.

- AFP/il

 


Other health News
Cancer drug reverses Alzheimer's in mice: study
Smoking linked to mental decline in men, says study
Brains of addicts are inherently abnormal, says study
US study finds Alzheimer's spreads like infection
Pfizer recalls 1 million packets of US birth control pills
France urges Europe-wide controls after implant scare
New drug for rare cystic fibrosis gets US approval
Brain 'hears' from different location than earlier thought
Doctors should check blood pressure on both arms: study
Ultrasound zaps could be used as male contraceptives: study
Pneumonia bug evolves to evade vaccine
New lung cancer test predicts survival
Oral HPV infections more common in men: study
Can tablets give you a pain in the neck?
Alzheimer's: French scientists focus on key target

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions