DOI: 10.1136/tc-2025-059990 ISSN: 0964-4563

Smoking depictions in the manga ‘ONE PIECE’ over its 27-year serialisation: a segmented time series analysis of Sanji

Hiroko Tobari, Chiharu Shimizu, Shiori Kawamura, Rita Kondo, Masaaki Aizawa

Objectives

This study investigates smoking depictions in the globally popular manga ONE PIECE over its 27-year publication period and its associations with tobacco control measures implemented in Japan.

Design

Time-series study.

Setting

Volumes 1–110 (1121 episodes) of ONE PIECE published between August 1997 and December 2024.

Interventions

Smoking scenes were identified and quantified by panel-based content analysis.

Main outcome measures

Prevalence of smoking panels relative to the total number of panels per volume.

Results

The overall prevalence of smoking panels was 4.7%, with a significant downward trend (p<0.001). Smoking depictions of Sanji, the only smoker among the 10 core characters in the series, accounted for 54% of the total of 5076, and his smoking portrayal significantly declined over the 27-year publication period (p=0.007). Interrupted time series analyses demonstrated statistically significant slope changes indicating decreasing trends in Sanji’s smoking depictions following the implementation of the revised Health Promotion Act (p<0.001).

Conclusions

Despite this decline, smoking behaviour and tobacco product depictions continued to appear in the series. Policies with adolescent-focused, legally binding implications for smoking environments were associated with reductions in the smoking depictions of a core character. Given the global reach of Japanese manga among young audiences, strengthening regulations on smoking depictions and enhancing media literacy education for adolescents may be necessary to reduce the risk of smoking initiation.

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