1 / 22

COTC

COTC. Appropriate Messages about Diet Relating to Breast Cancer Charles Atkin PhD MSU Communication Maria Lapinski PhD MSU Com/Food Safety. Diet Communication Strategies. TARGET AUDIENCES TARGET BEHAVIORS COMMUNICATION CHANNELS CAMPAIGN SOURCES PERSUASIVE APPEALS

Download Presentation

COTC

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COTC Appropriate Messages about Diet Relating to Breast Cancer • Charles AtkinPhD MSU Communication • Maria LapinskiPhD MSU Com/Food Safety

  2. Diet Communication Strategies • TARGET AUDIENCES • TARGET BEHAVIORS • COMMUNICATION CHANNELS • CAMPAIGN SOURCES • PERSUASIVE APPEALS • CULTURAL APPROPRIATENESS

  3. Target AudiencesDirect vs. Indirect Message Flow • Message  Girls • Message  Mothers  Girls • Message  Policymakers  Girls

  4. Which Target Responses? SOCIAL MARKETING: “Product Line”… e.g. -- Eat specific healthy foods -- Avoid specific junk/risky foods -- Consume fewer total calories -- Serve children nutritious diet -- Pressure fast food chain to offer options

  5. Representation of Target Behavior 1. VISUAL modeling (suitable for imitation) 2. VERBAL recommendation/exhortation 3. IMPLICIT suggestion

  6. Type of message 1. INSTRUCTIONHow 2. PERSUASIONWhy 3. AWARENESSWhat When

  7. Why instructional? • Learn which foods to choose • Learn cooking techniques • Strengthen self efficacy • Learn critical viewing skills: advertising entertainment

  8. Persuasive Appeals Immediate vs. remote outcome High vs. Low likelihood Strong vs. mild severity/payoff -- Health appeal: Breast cancer -- Many other appeals: Athletic performance Attractive to peers Self esteem

  9. What works best to promote diet? FOR GIRLS: Immediate & Likely outcomes Not BC threat FOR MOTHERS: Limited > frequent BC Positive > negative appeal Multiple > single appeal Subtle > vivid style

  10. Why use BC threat sparingly? • Not appropriate in media messages for girls • Lack of intuitive connection Complex causal chain • Lengthy time lag to outcome Food ---------------------- Harm • Already perceive greater risk than actual

  11. Where’s diet on NCI list? • Age • Personal history of BC • Family history • LCIS • Gene changes (BRCA1 BRCA2) • Age of menarche • Age of first child birth • HRT (E+P)

  12. NCI List (continued) 9. White race 10. Radiation therapy 11. Breast density 12. Took DES 13. Overweight (post-menopause) 14. Lack of physical activity 15. Drinking alcohol

  13. Note at end of NCI list: “Other possible risk factors are under study….effect of diet”

  14. Survey of adult women listing perceived seriousness of BC risk factors Score0-10 scale 9 Genetics / Family history 7 HRT 6 High-fat foods in childhood 6 Obesity in childhood 4 Chemicals / Pesticides

  15. If message presents breast cancer appeal… Most Credible BC Institutional Sources: • American Cancer Society • Federal agencies (CDC/NIH) • Medical centers • Foundations (Komen) • Universities (MSU)

  16. Best personalized messengers to convey breast cancer appeal… 1. Typical survivor Mom 2. Medical expert Mom 3. Typical girl/mother Mom, Girl 4. CelebrityGirl, Mom 5. Unique character? Girl

  17. Channels:GIRLSPARENTS • TV PSA spots • TV entertainment inserts • Internet games • Posters / Comics / Play booklets • Magazine/NP feature stories • Internet websites • Printed instructional materials

  18. Non-BC diet messages in media HUGE AMOUNT OF “CHILDREN & DIET” CONTENT CAN BE LEVERAGED: Number of stories in USA Today 2000-2005 • 488 Diet total -- 38 Diet & BC -- 331 Diet & Children -- 2 Diet & BC & Children

  19. NEWS COVERAGE in National Media Environmental risk factors for breast cancer (N= 231 stories in 2003-04) • 3% BC & obesity • 2% BC & eating certain unhealthy foods • 1% BC & eating certain beneficial foods • 1% Parents discourage obesity due to BC

  20. Advocacy Approaches GOAL: Alter policies/practices of food-related organizations TARGETS: Government agencies Restaurant chains TV networks Schools

  21. Influencing Organizations • Direct lobbying/lobbying (oral, written) • Augmented by perceived public opinion -- endorsements from associations -- sentiment in public forums -- comments in radio call-in programs -- published commentaryand letters -- direct input via mail and calls -- public opinion polls

  22. Influencing organizations:Role of media Raise diet/obesity issue on news agenda VOLUME & PROMINENCE OF STORIES Shape public opinion: editorial stance selection of news

More Related