Designing Health Communication Campaigns
What Works?
- Thomas E. Backer - UCLA, USA
- Everett Rogers - University of New Mexico, USA
- Pradeep Sopory - University of Wisconsin, USA
Other Titles in:
Health Communication
Health Communication
June 1992 | 181 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
This important collection presents a comparative synthesis of what works and what does not in mass media health campaigns. High priority is given to coverage of substance abuse prevention campaigns, but programmes on AIDS, smoking, teenage pregnancy, heart disease, Alzheimer's Disease and vehicle seat belt use are also reviewed. Designing Health Communication Campaigns deepens our understanding of how to design, implement and evaluate mass media campaigns by highlighting the contributions of media experts who add a human element to the various campaign experiences they describe.
Introduction
PART ONE: OVERVIEW
The Challenge of Health Behavior Change
One Solution
Health Communication Campaigns
Two Examples of Health Communication Campaigns
The Comparative Synthesis Study
Substance Abuse and High-Risk Youth
Setting the Agenda for the Issue of Drugs
PART TWO: GENERALIZATIONS ABOUT HEALTH COMMUNICATION CAMPAIGNS
Overview
Generalizations about Health Communication Campaigns
Discussion
PART THREE: INTERVIEWS WITH CAMPAIGN DESIGNERS/EXPERTS
Elaine Bratic Arkin
Georgetown University
Warren J Ashley
Entertainment Industry Coalition on AIDS
Charles Atkin
Michigan State University
Thomas E Backer
Human Interaction Research Institute
Edwin Chen
Los Angeles Times
Patrick C Coleman
Johns Hopkins University
Larry Deutchman
Entertainment Industries Council
Brian Dyak
Entertainment Industries Council
Fern Field
Brookfield Productions
Juan M Flaviar
International Institute of Rural Reconstruction, Philippines
Brian Flay
University of Illinois
June Flora
Stanford University
Vicki Freimuth
University of Maryland
Kipling J Gallion
The University of Texas at Austin
Robert W Gillespie
Population Communications
Robert Hornik
University of Pennsylvania
Jose Ruben Jara
Institute for Communication Research
C Anderson Johnson
University of Southern California
Marcy Kelly
Mediascope
Lawrence Kincaid
Johns Hopkins University
David McCallum
Center for Risk Communication
Jacqueline E McDonald
Scott Newman Center
John V Pavlick
Freedom Forum Media Studies Center
Mary Ann Pentz
University of Southern California
Ronald E Rice
Rutgers University
Everett M Rogers
University of Southern California
Charles Salmon
University of Wisconsin - Madison
Larry Stewart
Entertainment Industries Council
Lawrence Wallack
University of California at Berkeley
PART FOUR: IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Implications for Campaign Design
Implications for Future Research
A practical handbook that many of my students liked. I use it together with more theoretical texts.
Department of Communication Science, University of Amsterdam
May 6, 2012