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Advertising Exposure’s Effect on Quit Attempts by Mental Health Status, New York Adult Tobacco Survey, 2003–2011.

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posted on 2014-07-17, 02:46 authored by James M. Nonnemaker, Jane A. Allen, Kevin C. Davis, Kian Kamyab, Jennifer C. Duke, Matthew C. Farrelly

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***p<0.001.

Note: Regressions that use confirmed awareness as the key covariate cover the period April 2004–2011, whereas regressions that use gross rating points (GRPs) as the key covariate cover the period 2003–2011. Regressions controlled for age (18–24, 25–39, 40–64, ≥65), gender (male; female), education (less than high school diploma; high school diploma or GED; some college; college graduate), annual income (<$30,000; $30,000–$59,999; $60,000–$89,999; ≥$90,000; missing income), cigarettes smoked per day (<10, 10 to 19, ≥20), daily television viewing (<3 hours, ≥3 hours), respondent residence (New York City, Rest of New York state), and increases in state cigarette taxes (pre-, post-).

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