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Impact of Media on Health: Messages, Advertisements, and Portrayals

This chapter explores the effects of media on health, including unintentional positive/negative impacts, intentional promotion of healthier lifestyles, effects of advertisements on cigarettes, alcoholic beverages, and foods, as well as the impact of entertainment portrayals and health news. It also discusses the effects of health communication campaigns, edutainment, and media advocacy.

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Impact of Media on Health: Messages, Advertisements, and Portrayals

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  1. Chapter 16 Media Effects on Health

  2. Research Findings • Media messages on health have had either: • Unintentional positive impacts on viewers • Unintentional negative impacts on viewers • Media messages have also been intentionally designed to promote healthier lifestyles.

  3. Effects of Advertisements on Health • Focus on the health of individuals who use the products • 3 types of advertisements used: • Cigarettes • Alcoholic beverages • Foods

  4. Effects of Viewing Cigarette Ads • Association exists between cigarette use among adolescents and watching stock car racing • In Australia, adolescents are attracted to brands of cigarettes that use “lifestyles” appeals in advertising. • Half the children studied did not read the warning labels on the tobacco product advertisement.

  5. Effects of Viewing Alcohol Ads • Research has focused on: • Whether such ads entice adolescents to start drinking • Whether such ads cause increased alcohol consumption and, perhaps, drunk driving • Alcohol ads on television seem to encourage drinking among adolescents. • Correlation exists between exposure to alcohol ads, increased consumption of alcohol, and drunk driving.

  6. Effects of Viewing Food Ads • Food commercials may have positive or negative effects. • TV food ads did affect the short-term and long-term food preferences of children. • Kellogg’s campaign during the 1980’s to stress the anticancer benefits of a diet high in fiber and low in fat helped educate people and encouraged them to eat high-fiber and low-fat foods.

  7. Effects of Entertainment Portrayals on Health • Entertainment portrayals sometimes have powerful effects upon the health of audience members. • Suicidal behavior portrayed on mass media may have frightening effects.

  8. Entertainment Portrayals on Health: Telelvision • World portrayed on television is very different from real life in: • Matters related to health • Its numbers of overweight characters • Studies have shown that time spent watching television is a good predictor of weight problems in adolescents. • Smoking has almost disappeared from television and illegal drug use is rarely shown.

  9. Entertainment Portrayals on Health: Television (Cont’d) • A 1983 study found that television characters drank alcohol more than any other beverage. • Sexual content has steadily increased; 68% of the programs in the 1999-2000 contained sexual content, compared to the previous season’s 56%. • Few sexual scenes show the use of contraceptives or the practice of safe sex.

  10. Entertainment Portrayals on Health: Films • Effects of sexually explicit films- male college students tended to trivialize rape as a crime and showed more sexually callous attitudes toward women after viewing such films. • Two-thirds of children’s animated feature films have included at least one character who used tobacco or alcohol.

  11. Entertainment Portrayals on Health: Music Lyrics and Music Videos • Emphasize physical sex, violence, and violent sexual encounters • Negative effects on teen health: • Teenage pregnancy, suicide, substance abuse, and sexual assault • Different adolescents interpret videos differently, according to their age, race, gender, and previous experiences and attitudes.

  12. Effects of Health News • Two types of studies on health-related news: • Those that measure the impact of news media as sources of health information • Those that compare public opinion regarding a health topic to news media coverage of that topic

  13. Characteristics of Media Coverage of Health Issues • Contains information about biomedical research, medical hardware, and drug treatments • “Victim-blaming” attitude • The victim or patient is responsible for their own health problems • Emphasis on reporting health concerns that affect mainstream America • Do not offer information about symptoms for diseases, risk-reducing factors, and treatment facilities

  14. Health Communication Campaign Effects • Campaigns can have unintended effects that may be positive or negative. • A combination approach has a greater chance of getting positive results. • The scare tactic or fear appeal can be rather successful. • Certain media channels are more effective than others.

  15. Other Types of Mediated Health Education • Two new educational strategies • Edutainment • implanting health messages in entertainment content • Media advocacy • activities by public health agents that focus mass media attention on health issues at the social or public policy level, rather than at the individual level

  16. Edutainment • Many daytime soaps contain embedded health messages. • Instances of edutainment and their effects on audiences have not been studied extensively.

  17. Media Advocacy • Differs from other types of media communication campaigns: • Relies on community organization for its base of support • Use of agenda setting and framing • Treats the individual or group members as potential advocates who can help promote social change • Helps public policies • Focuses on media access to the news desk

  18. Other Important Tools for Health Education • Journalism education • Critical viewing skills • Media literacy training • Interactive communication technologies

  19. Recent Research and Future Trends • Unintended and intended messages from health-related communications and their negative and positive effects • The effects on individual health and health policy after the introduction of health information on the Internet • The Internet as a source of health messages • The effectiveness of media literacy programs

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