This 2007 advertisement aims to highlight the dangers of secondhand smoke.
The 2007 advertisement titled "Carotid", aims to educate smokers on how smoking can lead to stroke.
The 2006 advertisement titled "Mouth Cancer" graphically highlights the devastating relationship between smoking and mouth cancer.
The current campaign titled 'Bronchoscopy' produced by the Cancer Institute NSW, aims to encourage smokers to quit by focusing on a well-established health consequence of smoking - lung cancer.
The 2007 campaign titled Voice Within produced by the Cancer Institute NSW, focuses on the graphic health warning "smoking doubles your risk of stroke".
Quit Victoria's latest advertising campaign depicts powerfully the personal and emotional impact that smoking-caused illnesses have on the lives of smokers' families, particularly their children.
The 2007 advertisement titled "Echo 3 (Quitting is hard...but you're not alone)" produced by the Cancer Institute NSW, encourages smokers to put quitting on 'today's agenda' by tackling the excuses for delaying quitting.
A 2003 Quit advertisement titled "Rob" aims to encourage men to consider their smoking and call the Quitline for help and advice on how to quit.
The 'Cigarettes are eating you and your kids alive' aims to convince smokers to quit for themselves and their children, by showing the devastating health consequences for children exposed to secondhand smoke.
Quit's latest campaign asks smokers who are parents to consider what may indeed be worse than getting diagnosed with a smoking related illness, having to tell your children.
The ‘Who will you leave behind?' campaign features Perth brothers, Luke (31) and Ben (29) Eliot, whose father Neil passed away in 2007 from lung cancer caused by his smoking.
The updated National Tobacco Campaign makes a stronger connection between the smoking-caused diseases and the graphic health warnings on cigarette packs.
A 2002 Quit advertisement titled “131 848” that uses the Quitline number to demonstrate how many people have died of illness caused by smoking in the past seven years. The ad promotes the Quitline and number.
A 2003 Quit advertisement titled "Pregnancy" aims to encourage women who are pregnant to consider their smoking and call the Quitline for help and advice on how to quit.
A 2002 Quit advertisement titled “Nice People” introducing the audience to the people they would meet in the hospital if they were having treatment for lung cancer.
A 2002 Quit advertisement titled "Cigarette Recall" featuring comedian John Clarke as an executive from a tobacco company announcing a recall of all cigarettes.