When Cigarette Smoking Meets COVID-19: How the Two Types of Threat and Efficacy Perceptions Interactively Predict Danger Control and Fear Control Processes

Author:

Li Yachao1ORCID,Duong Hue Trong2ORCID,Massey Zachary B.3ORCID,Churchill Victoria4ORCID,Popova Lucy5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Studies, Department of Public Health, The College of New Jersey, Ewing Township, NJ 08628, USA

2. Department of Communication, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302, USA

3. School of Journalism, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65201, USA

4. Cancer Health Equity Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30310, USA

5. School of Public Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302, USA

Abstract

Growing evidence indicates that communicating the combined risk of smoking and COVID-19 encourages smoking cessation. Guided by the Extended Parallel Process Model (EPPM), we examined how perceived threats of smoking and COVID-19 independently and interactively predicted danger control responses (i.e., quit intentions and COVID-19-protective behavioral intentions) and fear control responses (i.e., fear and fatalism). We also explored the direct and interactive impacts of perceived efficacy of quitting smoking and COVID-protective behaviors on message outcomes. Structural equation modeling results (N = 747 U.S. adults who smoke) indicated that the perceived efficacy of COVID-protective behaviors positively predicted quit intentions. Higher perceived threat of COVID-19 and greater quitting efficacy predicted higher quit intentions directly and indirectly via fear. As perceived COVID-protective efficacy increased, the positive association between perceived quitting efficacy and quit intentions also increased. Smoking-related threat and efficacy perceptions did not predict COVID-protective behavioral intentions. This study added to EPPM by considering how threat and efficacy perceptions deriving from two different yet closely related risks affect protective behaviors. Thus, combining multiple threats in a single message might be a promising strategy to motivate smoking cessation amid the pandemic.

Funder

National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference51 articles.

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5. “I’m bored and I’m stressed”: A qualitative study of exclusive smokers, ENDS users, and transitioning smokers or ENDS users in the time of COVID-19;Popova;Nicotine Tob. Res.,2021

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