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CDC Health Priority Area How is the listed health priority


area connected to your topic? Cite
your source
Tobacco use The actor Sylvester Stallone agreed to
Nicotine smoke Brown and Williamson
Smoking cigarettes in five movies, including
Chew, snuff Rhinestone Cowboy, Godfather III,
Rambo, 50/50 and Rocky IV, for
Cigarette
$500,000.

Tobacco companies will spend over


$73 million promoting cigarettes in
Maine this year and theyre targeting
kids. Big Tobacco is talking to our
kids every day: in convenience stores,
in magazines, online, and through
special promotions designed to lure
them into thinking that smoking is
cool or a way to express their
independence.
Source: Bates, Clive, The truth about the
tobacco industryin its own words
http://www.who.int/tobacco/media/en/Tobacco
Explained.pdf

Tobacco Industry,
http://www.tobaccofreemaine.org/explore_facts
/tobacco_industry.php
Alcohol and other drug use Research has linked exposure to
Drinking portrayals of alcohol use in the mass
media with the development of positive
Alcoholism drinking expectancies by children and
Drug addiction adolescents
All illegal drugs
Adolescents are heavy users of television.
All medication Extrapolating from recent data obtained
from a nationally representative survey,
11- to 13-year-olds watch 27.7 hours and
14- to 18-year-olds watch 20.2 hours of
broadcast and taped television
programming each week (Roberts, Foehr,
Rideout, and Brodie, 1999a). As a result,
they are immersed in drinking portrayals
and alcohol product placements. A recent
content analysis of primetime television
from the 1998-1999 season, for example,
indicates that 71 percent of all
programming depicted alcohol use and 77
percent contained some reference to
alcohol

Source: Anderson, Peter, Impact of Alcohol


Advertising and Media Exposure on
Adolescent Alcohol Use: A Systematic Review
of Longitudinal Studies,
https://academic.oup.com/alcalc/article/44/3/22
9/178279/Impact-of-Alcohol-Advertising-and-
Media-Exposure

Grube,Joel, Alcohol in the Media: Drinking


Portrayals, Alcohol Advertising, and Alcohol
Consumption Among Youth,
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK3758
6/
Behaviors that contribute to unintentional injuries and People under the influence of alcohol can
violence have varied reactions to the drink. They
can become aggressive, passive
Car accidents
aggressive, angry, depressed, social or
Reckless behavior happy.
Homicide/murder
A recent review of over 130 studies, with
Self-harm behaviors over 130,000 participants, demonstrated
Gang violence/bullying that on average, playing violent video
games increased the chances of
aggressive behavior by 10-20%

Source: Drugs, Alcohol and Violence


http://alcoholrehab.com/drug-addiction/drugs-a
lcohol-and-violence/

Impact of a Childs Exposure to Media


Violence,
http://www.nj.gov/education/students/safety/be
havior/MediaViolencePamphlet.pdf
Unhealthy dietary behaviors Research suggests that nearly 50% of
High fat/cholesterol diets individuals with an eating disorder (ED) are
also abusing drugs and/or alcohol, a rate 5
High sodium times greater than what is seen in the
Eating disorders general population
Over eating/Binge eating
research is increasingly clear that media
does indeed contribute and that exposure
to and pressure exerted by media increase
body dissatisfaction and disordered eating
Source: Baker, Amy, Substance Abuse and
Eating Disorders,
https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/substa
nce-abuse-and-eating-disorders

Media, Body Image, and Eating Disorders,


https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/media-
body-image-and-eating-disorders

Inadequate physical activity Average Americans increased their daily


Sedentary time spent consuming electronic media at
home by 17%
Inactive between 1977 and 2002;
Lack of exercise (exercise)
Instead of reading books, studying, playing
Physical activity
outdoors with other children, and engaging
in social activities, they end up being
cooped up in their rooms watching
television. And because of technological
advancements and the availability of
gadgets to young people, these children
end up spending a significant amount of
time in front of their computers and
handheld video games.
Source: Maibach, Edward, The Influence of
the Media Environment on Physical Activity:
Looking for the Big Picture,
http://activelivingresearch.org/files/Maibach.pd
f

Negative Influences of Media on the


Society,http://influence.bafree.net/negative-infl
uences-of-media-on-the-society.php

Sexual behaviors that may result in HIV infection, other As much as 80% of all movies shown on
sexually transmitted diseases, and unintended pregnancies network or cable television stations have
sexual content.2 An analysis of music
HIV/AIDS
videos indicates that 60% portray sexual
STIs/STDs feelings and impulses, and a substantial
Premature birth
Birth defects minority display provocative clothing and
sexually suggestive body movements.

. The average teen spends 3 h to 4 h per


day in front of the television, which in some
cases is more time than that spent in the
classroom (2,3). The Kaiser Institute has
studied both the frequency and content of
sexual messages during the family hour on
the main American television networks. In
their research, there were an average of
8.5 sexual interactions during family hour
in 1996, which represented a 270%
increase since 1976 (2.3 per hour) (2).
Further, only 9% of scenes that included
sexual content had any mention of issues
relating to sexual risks or responsibilities
(2).
Source: Grube, Joel, Adolescent sexuality
and the
media,https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl
es/PMC1070813/

Grant, Christina, Teens, sex and the media: Is


there a connection?,
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PM
C2792686/

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