Celeb endorsements play almost no role in fuelling internet banking trend

Washington, April 27 (ANI): People use internet banking either because of its benefits or peer pressure but very rarely due to perceived prestige or celebrity endorsement, a new study has found.

Understanding what makes people adopt a particular technology could be crucial to the future success of internet banking, according to Weihua Shi and Kenneth Zantow of the College of Business, at the University of Southern Mississippi, Long Beach.

They point out that while there are various research models that have attempted to explain the adoption of new technologies, the majority of these assume that people make a rational choice based on a systematic decision process.

In many cases this may be entirely contrary to how people behave and they suggest that it is more likely that people simply follow the herd.

If large numbers of people are already using a particular technology, then once a tipping point is passed, peer pressure causes other people to adopt the innovation too.

Imitation, they say, is the best form of flattery, and yet there are very few published research studies that discuss how irrational imitation can influence technology adoption.

Shi and Zantow hope to remedy this situation and have looked at three types of imitation: frequency-based, trait-based, and outcome-based that influence adoption.

Frequency-based imitation simply implies that people will follow the herd, individuals are more likely to imitate an action if that action has been taken by a large number of other individuals.

Trait-based imitation is usually associated with individuals taking a particular action because other specific people whom they hold in high regard have previously taken that action.

Outcome-based imitation is a more sophisticated approach to decision-making in which individuals assess the impact adoption of the technology has on other people.

The team quizzed individuals on their attitudes and their adoption of internet banking and adjust their results to control for gender, age, and income.

Specifically, for frequency-based imitations, respondents were asked to indicate the degree to which they agree that using internet banking was popular, particularly in their peer group.

For trait-based imitations, respondents were asked about whether people of high status use internet banking and whether that in itself is a status symbol.

For outcome-based imitation, the team asked whether people using internet banking were more efficient and profitable in their banking.

A sliding scale of agree-to-disagree was used and the team could then analyze the data statistically.

The results showed that frequency-based and outcome-based decisions were the strongest predictors of whether someone would adopt internet banking.

“The results indicate that awareness of the positive outcomes associated with internet banking, or that a large number of customers had made the decision to use internet banking, would influence potential customers to jump on to the bandwagon,” the team notes.

Moreover, banks could boost adoption if they improve the online banking service as outcome-based decisions were predominant rather than people simply following the herd.

Trait-based imitation was not a significant factor.

While other products are often associated with celebrities or other successful people through their advertising efforts, the participants in our study indicate this may not be helpful for promoting internet banking, the researchers add.

The study has appeared in the International Journal of Banking, Accounting and Finance. (ANI)

Commissioners question CFA education campaign

The Victorian Bushfire Royal Commissioners have questioned a favourable assessment of a new community education campaign that has been brought in since their interim report.

The man monitoring the State Government’s implementation of the interim recommendations, Neil Comrie, says a new community education campaign is “proceeding well”.

But research shows 80 per cent of people in high-risk areas still take a “wait-and-see” approach rather than leaving early as the campaign says.

Commissioner Bernard Teague questioned putting all the emphasis on getting out rather than pointing to lifesaving refuges like dams, when, he said, the reality was people would not necessarily go.

Commissioner Ron McLeod suggested all the marketing in the world would not work if people did not believe in the message.

Mr Comrie said a new stay-or-go policy was in development but the best advice was still not to be there.

He said the state had “done what it could” to try to change the attitudes of those who took a wait-and-see approach.

Refuge frustration

Mr Comrie also told the inquiry the establishment of fire refuges as recommended in the interim report has been held up by the development of a new stay or go policy.

Commissioner Bernard Teague said there was a need to quickly and clearly identify refuges, as distinct from neighbourhood safer places, but said “We can’t even get to the stage of refuges”.

Mr Rush questioned how any potential changes to stay or go would justifiably hold up refuges.

Mr Comrie said he was aware of no attempt to deliberately delay.

Having large number of supportive relatives increases fear of dying

Washington, Mar 30 (ANI): Fear of dying increases among the elderly when the person is surrounded by a large number of supportive relatives, new research claims.

The study has been published in Postgraduate Medical Journal.

This runs counter to the perception that a network of supportive informal family carers eases the fear of death, say the authors.

To reach the conclusion, the research team tested attitudes to death and dying in 1000 people aged 65 and older, made up of an ethnically diverse sample of the population and a sample of people virtually all of whom were White British and from similar social, educational, and economic backgrounds.

All the interviewees were drawn from Office for National Statistics (ONS) Omnibus Surveys (predominantly White British) and Ethnibus Surveys (ethnically diverse) in Britain.

They were asked directly how much they feared dying, the manner of death, losing control over their death, and suffering pain. Their responses were scored on a five point scale.

They also responded to 35 questions about older people”s quality of life, using a validated questionnaire (OPQOL).

Almost a third of Ethnibus respondents lived in households with four or more adults compared with just 1 percent of the ONS sample. And just one in 20 Ethnibus respondents lived alone compared with almost half of the ONS sample.

Two thirds of the Ethnibus sample had large family networks of four or more relatives who were prepared to help out practically compared with one in three among the ONS sample.

The analysis showed that more than half of the Ethnibus sample respondents had the worst scores for death and dying and quality of life.

Better quality of life reduced levels of fear in both sample groups, but those in the Ethnibus sample had significantly greater levels of fear than those in the ONS sample.

More than three out of four of the Ethnibus sample, which included people of Indian, Pakistani, Black Caribbean, and Chinese ethnicities, had up to four extreme fears around death. These included fear of the mode of death, fear of not being able to control their death, fear of dying itself, and fear of being in pain.

Having more relatives to help out with practical tasks, if needed, increased fears in three of these four domains.

Poor health, a longstanding illness, and difficulty walking 400 yards were also associated with an increased fear of death among this sample.

Older age reduced fears around death, but only in the ONS sample. (ANI)

Tasmanian farmers more optimistic

Tasmanian farmer confidence is on the rise again.

Rabobank’s quarterly rural confidence survey has found attitudes improved around the state, with more farmers expecting conditions to improve over the next 12 months compared with those expecting a decline.

Tasmanian manager Greg Bott says 80 per cent of primary producers are feeling positive, compared with less than 70 per cent last quarter.

“The things that have contributed to it: winter last year was particularly bad for the dairy industry and the milk prices coincided with that, they were very, very low,” he said.

“I think you’ll find by now that they’re starting to recover a little bit from that and the milk prices are probably coming in a little bit better than they first thought.”

But Mr Bott says depending on the sector, there are mixed feelings.

“There’s a little bit of negativity in vegetables with McCain’s pulling out and that remains an issue particularly as Simplot starts negotiating prices for next year and most farmers believe it’ll be lower,” he siad.

“Poppy companies are still to negotiate, you know most of the midlands are confident because yes it’s rained after three years of drought.”

Clever women can”t be beautiful, feels Felicity Kendal

London, March 27 (ANI): Actress Felicity Kendal has spoken against the stereotypical attitudes towards women, insisting people still expect the ladies to be ”squeaky clean”.

The 63-year-old renowned British TV star, who is presently portraying a 19th century prostitute in the West End revival of George Bernard Shaw’s Mrs Warren”s Profession, said women were still expected to live up to chastity.

“Clever women can”t be too beautiful. They”ve got to be perfect and they must be completely squeaky clean. It is nonsense,” The Telegraph quoted her as apparently saying.

“If a woman chooses something that isn”t respectable she is still reviled and still accused. It is not fair to judge a woman just because she looks great and uses whatever she”s got to be successful,” she was said to have added. (ANI)

Relatively little shift in Pak attitude towards India: Scholar

WASHINGTON: Though Pakistan fears that a repeat of the Mumbai attacks could be “very dangerous” to it, there is relatively little shift in its attitude towards India which it views as a “threat”, a noted US scholar has said.

Dan Markey of the Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington-based think-tank, was recently in Pakistan, where he met top officials of the country.

“We did actually have a chance to meet with Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir in Islamabad. And while I can’t really characterise those discussions in detail, I can say that, across the board, there is, to my eyes, relatively little shift in Pakistani attitudes about what India represents,” Markey, a Senior Fellow for India, Pakistan and South Asia at the Council, said.

But, he said there is “certainly an understanding and a fear, a palpable fear that what happened after Mumbai (attacks) could happen again and would be very, very dangerous for Pakistan.”

“So there’s a desire to try to get out of the post-Mumbai rut, but that doesn’t reflect some deeper shift in attitudes about, you know, the purported threat that India represents to Pakistan,” Markey said.

Pakistanis are open to talks and see the dialogue as a way to try to reduce tensions with India, “but they don’t want to be pushed around,” he said.

Family more important than career for women: Oz survey

Melbourne, Mar 5 (ANI): A new survey has revealed that most women are opting for a healthy family life rather a career.

A national study of almost 2300 women, commissioned by parenting website Kidspot, showed three quarters of respondents aged between 18 and 65 believe family is the single most important thing in their life.

The survey says women are shifting from a “perfectionist” attitude and rate their family, seeing friends, keeping fit, further study and community work as more important than pursuing their career.

Jenni Colwill president of 2020Women, an organisation that promotes gender equality, said while the emphasis on family was not surprising, the results suggested women were “disengaged” in other areas and this was not the case.

“We’ve got this opinion that women have to do everything, the paid and the unpaid work, the family responsibilities and I’m not sure that has necessarily changed,” News.com.au quoted her as saying.

“I think what you see now is women who are more assertive, when they get annoyed with the workplace, they’re more likely to express their dissatisfaction and leave,” she said.

Kidspot chief executive Katie May, however, believes women today “no longer believe that ‘having it all’ requires ‘doing it all’.

“The areas causing a woman the least stress today are trying to succeed in a man’s world and the inability to progress her career due to commitments at home,” she said.

“It’s a change on what we’ve seen previously and a move away from perfectionist attitudes of many women,” she added. (ANI)

Top Brit doc backs call to ban alcohol ads

London, September 11 (ANI): A leading British doctor is in full support of the BMA’s call to ban alcohol advertising, as he feels that such publicity campaigns do have damaging effects on young people.

“(It is) a logical recommendation to attempt to reverse the all embracing pro-alcohol culture that has grown up in a period of deregulation and liberalisation over the last quarter of a century,” says to Ian Gilmore, President of the Royal College of Physicians and Chairman of the Alcohol Health Alliance.

Writing an editorial for bmj.com, he has even stressed the need for more public conversation about people’s attitudes to alcohol as a society.

“The problem is not just about drunk, misbehaving adolescents. We can no longer ignore the many millions of people in the UK who are quietly over-consuming cheap, readily available, and heavily promoted alcohol, storing up major problems for the future,” he concludes. (ANI)

Kids in modern Britain living in ‘Dickensian poverty’

London, September 10 (ANI): Kids in the UK receive no better treatment than what orphan Oliver Twist endured in Charles Dickens’s novel, a teacher has claimed.

Lesley Ward alleged students attended school unable to dress themselves, use cutlery or even use the toilet, mirroring the plight of Twist, the child protagonist born into a life of poverty and misfortune in a workhouse.

The president of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL) said parents were less likely to pay attention to children’s education due to the strain of living in poor conditions.

“That’s shocking isn’t it?” the Daily Star quoted her as saying.

“You go out to work, perhaps two or even three part-time jobs, and you are still living below the poverty line. Life mirroring the times of Dickens.

“Shared poverty gives rise to shared attitudes, which make learning difficult. Attitudes like: ‘Why should he stay at school? I didn’t and I manage’,” she added. (ANI)

Kids’ physical activity improves when parents back vigorous team sports

Washington, July 6 (ANI): A new study has shown that parents who value strenuous team sports are more likely to influence their kids to join a team or at least participate in some kind of exercise, and spend less time in front of the TV or computer.

For the study, researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and Duke University examined a sample of 681 parents of 433 fourth- and fifth-graders from 12 schools in Houston.

They found that those parents who conveyed the importance of high-intensity team sports to their children had more active children.

Both the boys and girls watched less TV and spent less time on their computers.

However, the study also found that endorsing all types of exercise – both team sports and individual sports – increased boys’ activity levels but not girls’.

“The difference between activity levels in the girls and boys had to do with the parents’ attitudes toward the types of activities. Parents encouraged sons to partake in vigorous- and moderate-intensity team and individual sports, and vigorous-intensity home chores, such as heavy yard work, more than they encouraged these activities for their daughters,” said lead author Cheryl Braselton Anderson, PhD.

“There still is gender bias on encouraging boys to participate in certain sports and strenuous activities more than girls,” Anderson added.

The findings appear in the July issue of Health Psychology, published by the American Psychological Association. (ANI)

Brown says he will lead Labour to next election

London, June 21 (ANI): Dashing hopes of Labour Party rebels, British Prime Minister has declared that he will be leading the party at the next election, and has no intention on quitting the leadership.

“I’m just getting on with the job. It is because of my purpose in politics that I’m determined to lead Labour to the next general election. We must and will win,” Brown told the News of the World.

Just a day ago, headlines had suggested that Brown could walk away from Downing Street at any moment, but his recent interview was unequivocal.

It is the first time when Brown has said he will stay on – and he denies it’s because he likes being in power.

“It has never been the trappings of power I care about,” he explains, “but what we can do in power to help hard-pressed families.”

Just two weeks ago Brown was fighting for his political life after a controversial Cabinet shake-up. But now he insists he has a united team.

“I think people want to work for a common purpose and I think it’s really important that, when things are difficult. In every political party there are different opinions and moods and attitudes. I don’t think much about that at all. I get on with the job,” he said.

Brown admits the heavy poll defeats in the European and local elections were a “referendum”. But he views it as a response to the MPs’ expenses scandal and the economic crisis, not to his leadership.

Stubbornly, he insists that Labour are the only political party that will not cut public services.

“I think it’s incredibly important for people to recognise that we’re not just a party – we’re a cause,” he explains.

On the wave of redundancies sweeping the country, Brown says: “People will look back on this downturn and say that probably 500,000 more jobs would have gone if we hadn’t taken the action we’ve taken. (ANI)

Dirty secrets of Australians revealed

Melbourne, May 9 (ANI): Nearly half of all Australians have admitted that, because of alcohol, they had sex with someone they wish they hadn’t, research shows.

In a sex survey conducted by The Daily Telegraph, it was found that 47 per cent of women and nearly 44 per cent of men have had a drunken sexual encounter they have later regretted.

According to Drug and Alcohol Research and Training Director Paul Dillon, it wasn’t just young people who regretted having sex because they were drunk, reports The Daily Telegraph.

“Alcohol is a powerful disinhibitor. Unfortunately, so many people find themselves in situations they wish they had never been in,” he said.

“Some of those situations can be life-changing, whether it’s unwanted pregnancy or sexually transmitted disease or whatever,” he added.

The survey also found 18 per cent of respondents were under the legal age of 16 when they first had intercourse.

When it comes to how often a couple should have sex, a quarter of Aussies think three times a week is ideal.

More than 2000 people responded to The Daily Telegraph’s online poll, which asked about their attitudes and experiences regarding sex. (ANI)

4 in 10 say they have achieved the ‘American Dream’

New York, May 5 (ANI): Recession, it seems, has failed to dampen the American spirit. A whopping 44 percent of Americans feel they have achieved their dreams.

Another 31 percent are optimistic that they will achieve it someday, while twenty percent think that the American dream is beyond them.

According to a CBS News/New York Times poll, more Americans are admitting that they have achieved the American dream, up 12 points from such contentment in 2005.

In a survey taken in April and released Monday, 31 percent say they will reach the American dream in their lifetime, while the other twenty percent is not so positive.

Older Americans are also more likely to say they’ve achieved the American dream than younger people.

But what, exactly, is the American dream? Twenty-seven percent of those surveyed chose “freedom and opportunity,” making it the top answer. That was followed by “being successful” (18 percent), “financial security and a job” (13 percent) “having a home” (9 percent), and “happiness/peace of mind” (6 percent).
Predictably, attitudes on the topic are correlated to income levels. More than half (58 percent) of those who make more than 50,000 dollars per year say they have achieved the American dream, while only a third of those who make under 50,000 dollars say so.
Nearly three in four Americans (72 percent) believe that Americans who start out poor have the opportunity to get rich despite their initial circumstances.

But optimism is diminished from two years ago, when 81 percent felt that such social mobility was possible. Americans with lower levels of education and income are less likely to believe they have a chance to becoming wealthy.
Concerns about standard of living are on the rise. While 58 percent of Americans said that their standard of living is better than that of their parents. Only 43 percent of parents think that their children will have a better standard of living than they do.
This poll was conducted among a random sample of 998 adults nationwide. The error due to sampling for results based on the entire sample could be plus or minus three percentage points. (ANI)

Britons ready to strip, bed bosses to beat recession blues

London, Apr 10 (ANI): Britons are so distressed by the economic slowdown that they are ready to pose nude for just œ6,500 pounds, according to a poll.

The poll by global research company www.OnePoll.com revealed that three out of four adults would happily strip off to pay their credit card or utility bills.

One in five women confessed that she wouldn’t mind sleeping with her boss to secure a pay rise.

And one in four ladies would happily bed a sugar daddy if it meant she would be better off in life.

“The recession really has had a negative impact on people’s attitudes to making money and in some cases people are just desperate for a quick buck,” the Daily Express quoted a spokesman for www.OnePoll.com as saying.

He added: “It is incredible to think that people are even considering some of the things listed.”

The survey of 4,000 people revealed 18 per cent of Britons would fiddle their expenses.

Also, 21 per cent of UK residents claimed that they would sell treasured possessions like wedding rings and 50 per cent would consider recycling presents so that they didn’t have to buy new ones. (ANI)

Nudity can curb teen pregnancies, say nudists

London, Mar 19 (ANI): A more relaxed approach to naked bodies can help curb increasing number of teenage pregnancies, say nudists.

The British Naturist Society insists that it was no coincidence the highest number of teens got pregnant in the “least liberal” countries.

“Anyone who advocates prudery should be required to stand in front of a group of pregnant teenagers and explain why it is that, in countries such as Denmark or the Netherlands, most of them would not be pregnant,” the Sun quoted the society as saying in a paper submitted to the Scottish Government.

“There is strong evidence that conventional attitudes towards the human body contribute significantly to a wide range of problems, some of them serious – but there is incredible reluctance to face the implications.

“Westminster Government figures published recently show that the UK has the worst teenage pregnancy figures of any country in Europe, while the figures are even worse in Scotland.

“The UK is probably the most censorious country in Europe about anything to do with the body.

“This pattern of less body tolerance, worse outcomes is repeated across the Western world. Our research shows conclusively that this is no chance connection,” said Andrew Welch, commercial manager of the British Naturist Society.

The comments were made in a seven-page document lodged with the Scottish Government, which this month closed consultation on proposals to improve the lives of children. (ANI)

Germany winner in “global attitudes” poll as China and Russia fade

Germany winner in London – Global attitudes towards Russia and China have changed for the worse over the past year as positive ratings for the US are on the rise for the first time since 2005, a poll published by the BBC World Service showed Friday.

As in previous years, Germany fared best in the poll, with every country viewing it positively, and 61 per cent of people rating it favourably, up from 55 per cent a year ago.

Britain also also moved up seven points, with 58 per cent of people rating it as having a positive influence.

Negative views about Russia jumped by eight points to 42 per cent among the 13,000 people questioned in 21 countries, while 39 per cent had a negative view of China’s role in global affairs.

The survey, conducted by the international pollster GlobeScan, was taken after the election of US President Barack Obama.

It showed that attitudes towards the US are gradually becoming more favourable, although 43 per cent of those asked still have a negative view of Washington’s impact on world affairs.

However, the US, for the first time since 2005, surpassed Russia in positive ratings, with an average of 40 per cent compared with 35 per cent last year.

The poll, in which GlobeScan cooperated with the Program on International Policy Attitudes (Pipa) at the University of Maryland, was carried out in the 10 weeks leading up to February 1.

In the same survey a year ago, in the same countries, people leaned more towards saying China and Russia were having a positive influence on the world, poll analysts said.

“Our poll results suggest that China has much to learn about winning hearts and minds in the world,” said GlobeScan chairman Doug Miller.

“It seems that a successful Olympic Games has not been enough to offset other concerns that people have,” he said.

The poll also suggests that substantially more people now have a negative view of Russia’s influence, which was judged negative by 42 per cent and positive by just 30 per cent.

“As for Russia, the more it acts like the old Soviet Union, the less people outside its borders seem to like it,” Miller said.

As was the case last year, Iran, Israel, Pakistan and North Korea were rated most negatively, the BBC said.

But the US is still rated negatively by 43 per cent of those polled. However, this is an improvement from 47 per cent 2008.

“Though BBC polls have shown that most people around the world are hopeful that Barack Obama will improve US relations with the world, it is clear that his election alone is not enough to turn the tide,” said Steven Kull, director of Pipa.

“People are still looking to see if there are significant changes in US policies.” (dpa)

Duffy to be the face of multi-million Diet Coke campaign

Washington, Jan 15 (ANI): Pop star Duffy will soon be appearing in a multi-million pound advertising campaign for slim-line beverage Diet coke.

The ‘Mercy’ hitmaker has signed a lucrative deal with the drinks giant to promote the beverage across Europe.

Duffy emphasized that she suits the advert, as she is addicted to the drink.

“(I drink) so much of the stuff, they were either going to give me shares in the company or put me in the advert,” Contactmusic quoted Duffy, as saying.

Coca-Cola marketing director Cathryn Sleight too agrees that they have made the right decision by roping in Duffy.

“The campaigns are well known for tapping into powerful social and cultural zeitgeist and Duffy is a great embodiment of today’s modern female attitudes,” Sleight said.

“She has a strong appeal with our core female audience and we’re confident that this campaign will become just as iconic as previous ‘Diet Coke’ advertising campaigns,” Sleight added. (ANI)

Sharing experiences with others can change how we recognize our own faces

Washington, Jan 8 (ANI): Sharing an experience with another person may change the perception we have of our own self, such as the recognition of our own face, according to a new study.

Published online in the open-access journal PLoS ONE, this study has for the first time shown that the image a person holds of his/her own face can actually change through shared experiences with other people”s faces.

“As a result of shared experiences, we tend to perceive other people as being more similar to us, and this applies also to the recognition of our own face. This process may be at the root of constructing a self-identity in a social context,” said Dr Manos Tsakiris, Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway, University of London.

The study reveals that recognition of people’s own face is not as consistent as they might think.

During the study, the participants” ability to recognise their own face changed when they watched the face of another person being touched at the same time as their own face was touched, as though they were looking in a mirror.

When the researchers asked the subjects to recognize a picture of their own face, the picture that people chose included features of the other person they had previously seen. This did not happen when the two faces were touched out of synchrony.

Tsakiris said that the findings imply that shared experiences may influence the way we perceive ourselves and possibly the way we interact with others.

“If I feel that you are more like me, I might then behave to you in a different way. We now test whether shared experiences can make us stereotype others less, or change our attitudes towards people of different social groups, race or gender,” Tsakiris said.

Research on self-recognition may also have a significant impact in understanding and helping people with appearance-related concerns.

Shared sensory experiences may ease such concerns and provide insights into the mechanisms that cause them. (ANI)

Smokers may harm kids via third-hand smoke too

Washington, January 6 (ANI): Those who believe that their children are safe from the harmful effects of tobacco because they always smoke outside their homes, or inside only when kids are away, need to think about again. A new study has shown that tobacco smoke contamination lingers even after a cigarette is extinguished.

Researchers at MassGeneral Hospital for Children (MGHfC) describe this phenomenon as “third-hand” smoke.

Lead researcher Jonathan Winickoff, assistant director of the MGHfC Center for Child and Adolescent Health Policy, claims that his team’s study is the first to examine adult attitudes about the health risks to children of third-hand smoke, and how such beliefs may relate to rules about smoking in their homes.

“When you smoke – anyplace – toxic particulate matter from tobacco smoke gets into your hair and clothing. When you come into contact with your baby, even if you”re not smoking at the time, she comes in contact with those toxins. And if you breastfeed, the toxins will transfer to your baby in your breastmilk,” he says.

He, however, still insists that nursing a baby, if one is a smoker, is still preferable to bottle-feeding.

The researcher points out that tobacco smoke carries 250 poisonous gases, chemicals and several harmful metals, and 11 of such compounds are classified as Group 1 carcinogens, the most dangerous.

He further highlighted the fact that small children are especially susceptible to third-hand smoke exposure because they can inhale near, crawl and play on, or touch and mouth contaminated surfaces.

Winickoff says that third-hand smoke can remain indoors even long after the smoking has stopped.

Just like low-level lead exposure, according to him, low levels of tobacco particulates are associated with cognitive deficits among children.

He said that these findings suggest that even extremely low levels of these compounds may be neurotoxic, and thus smoking should be restricted in all indoor areas inhabited by children.

“The dangers of third-hand smoke are very real. Our goal was to find out if people who were aware of these harmful effects were less likely to smoke inside of their home,” says Winickoff, who is a professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School and a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics” Richmond Center.

Winickoff”s study shows that increasing awareness of how third-hand smoke harms the health of children may encourage home smoking bans. (ANI)