Imperatives of health or happiness: Narrative constructions of long-term smoking after undergoing lung screening

Author:

Olson Rebecca E1ORCID,Wen Ek, Xuan1,Staines Zoe1,Goh Felicia1,Marshall Henry M2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Queensland, Australia

2. The Prince Charles Hospital, Australia

Abstract

Tobacco control policies reinforce a health imperative that positions citizens as duty-bound to manage their health by abstaining from or quitting smoking. Limited attention is paid to the repercussions – especially for lung screening – of anti-smoking rhetoric emphasising individual responsibility. Drawing on interviews with 27 long-term smokers involved in an international lung screening trial, this study analysed Australian smokers’ narratives of smoking. By attending to stigma and the use of public health rhetoric within personal narratives, we show how narratives underscoring individual responsibility for quitting were layered with conflicting explanations of biological responsibility and normative expectations. Ironically, narratives of individual responsibility potentially undermine smoking cessation. In positioning smokers as responsible for their own healthy choices, such rhetoric also positions smokers as responsible for managing their emotional health, which some did through smoking. Thus, anti-smoking campaigns pit the neoliberal imperative of health against the happiness imperative. These findings have implications for the design and delivery of lung screening campaigns. They also support calls to move beyond health messaging emphasising individual choice, towards acknowledging the moral power of structures and public health campaigns to discipline citizens in unintended ways.

Funder

Prince Charles Hospital Foundation Grant

metro north hospital and health service

National Health and Medical Research Council

University of Queensland

Queensland Advancing Clinical Research Fellowship

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health (social science)

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