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SHS and children campaign overview June 2010

SHS and children campaign overview June 2010. The SHS problem . In two smoker households nicotine levels are 21x higher than households with no smokers [1]. Children whose parents smoke have 2.9x hair nicotine levels of those whose parents don’t smoke [1].

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SHS and children campaign overview June 2010

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  1. SHS and children campaign overview June 2010

  2. The SHS problem In two smoker households nicotine levels are 21x higher than households with no smokers [1] Children whose parents smoke have 2.9x hair nicotine levels of those whose parents don’t smoke [1] 22% of young people in the UK are exposed to tobacco smoke at home [2] Tobacco smoke contains 4,000 chemicals. 69 of these are carcinogens [3] Inhaled side stream smoke is 4x more toxic than mainstream smoke [4] SHS in cars is 23x more toxic than SHS in a house [3],[5] The smaller the lungs the more dangerous the smoke [4] That means the children of smokers ‘smoke’ more than their parents [5], [6] Sources: 1. Kabir et al 2009. 2. Royal College of Physicians 2010. 3. Desapriya et al 2009. 4. Jarvie & Malone 2008. 5. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health (2009), 6. tobaccocontrol.bmj.com

  3. What does this mean for the North West? Therefore children are more likely to be exposed to SHS One of the highest prevalence rates of smoking in England [1] 1. Office for National Statistics 2008

  4. Our task Develop a brand and communications campaign to protectchildren and young people in the North West from exposure to second hand smoke

  5. Social marketing approach Desk research Service mapping Quantitative research Qualitative research Steering group Communications planning Brand development Brief interventions

  6. Who are we talking to?

  7. Audience insights from qualitative research No-one is unaware that smoking is harmful and therefore that smoking around children is harmful to them BUT defences/excuses are built up and there is some lack of awareness around SHS and children Three audience typologies identified Indifferent Intractable Mutable

  8. Lancashire audience breakdown The quantitative benchmarking research has allowed us to quantify these typologies. Mutables and indifferents represent thelargest proportion of the typologies in your county. North West overall sample Lancashire sample Mutable and indifferent 74%

  9. What’s the problem and how can we overcome it? Deliver a benefit not a sacrifice I’m sick of being told off about smoking Concise call to action What do you actually want me to do? Tell them about Invisible Smoke I’ve heard it all before; it is nothing to do with me They aren’t my children Show an age range of children That’s not me Reference TRUE behaviour

  10. We must hold up a mirror for our audience: to EDUCATE that current behaviour is NOT protecting children and to clearly SHOW what they should do in order to protect their children in home and car.

  11. What is required? Abrandthat: • Delivers a clear message that says go right outside to smoke, not just on the back step or out of the window • Identifies that current behaviour is not enough to protect children from SHS • Is memorable, clear, with a concise call to action, similar to.. • Taps in to parent’s innate desire to protect their children • Appeals to mutable and indifferent groups and whilst not having a huge impact on the intractable audience, it does not turn them off completely

  12. The brand What do I need to do? Take it right outside Why? Because the majority of cigarette smoke is invisible

  13. The elements of the campaign Visibility of SHS issue across the region Community engagement and education across the 24 PCTs Support and further information

  14. TV

  15. Microsite

  16. Roadshow • Take the second hand smoke message into the heart of the community • Interactive and flexible experience to tour across 24 PCTs • Interrupt, attract, engage, educate • Reaches areas with low literacy through face to face contact • Focus on areas with naturally occurring high footfall of our target audience (supported with media relations) • Allow direct engagement and signposting • Talk through key campaign messages • Distribute branded items to drive word of mouth

  17. Community engagement • Spreading the message via trained community champions • Build campaign awareness in a community, signposting and creating dialogue • Supporting the wider campaign and engaging in an informal way • Community Champions can effectively work locally to reassurepeople about taking action • Disseminate information and literature through community networks • Collateral distributed via street teams or with the support of your own community groups and networks • Utilise existing community relationships

  18. PR • Campaign launch scheduled for 3rd August • Drive media interest, regionally, sub-regionally and locally • Maximise press office function and offer support for all partners • Engaging media relations to make it harder for our target audience to turn a blind eyeto the dangers of second hand smoke • Road show media relations activity with local press to drive footfall to roadshows • Support from spokespeople relevant to each area • Use celebrities to drive interest with the press • Use case studies to nudge people towards behavioural change

  19. Timings Stakeholder engagement JUNE 2010 AUG 2010 AUGUST 2010 ONWARDS AUG 2010 – 2011 ONWARDS TV, text service and microsite Roadshow activity across 24 PCTs Targeted local activity

  20. What does success look like? • 22% of all children are exposed to smoke in the home in the NW* • Over 310,000 children in the UK are admitted to primary or secondary care each year (RCP, 2010) • This costs the NW NHS £3.98m per year* • For the campaign to deliver 100% ROI within 12 months (based upon annual costs to state) in the NW we need to convert... *These data assumes that exposure in the NW is the same as exposure in the rest of the country, based upon 11% of ALL children living in NW

  21. The goal 18,090

  22. How we work together to achieve the goal

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