Use of mass media campaigns to change health behaviour.

Author(s)
Wakefield, M.A. Loken, B. & Hornik, R.C.
Year
Abstract

Mass media campaigns are widely used to expose high proportions of large populations to messages through routine uses of existing media, such as television, radio, and newspapers. Exposure to such messages is, therefore, generally passive. Such campaigns are frequently competing with factors, such as pervasive product marketing, powerful social norms, and behaviours driven by addiction or habit. In this review the authors discuss the outcomes of mass media campaigns in the context of various health-risk behaviours (eg, use of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs, heart disease risk factors, sex-related behaviours, road safety, cancer screening and prevention, child survival, and organ or blood donation). They conclude that mass media campaigns can produce positive changes or prevent negative changes in health-related behaviours across large populations. They assess what contributes to these outcomes, such as concurrent availability of required services and products, availability of community-based programmes, and policies that support behaviour change. Finally, they propose areas for improvement, such as investment in longer better-funded campaigns to achieve adequate population exposure to media messages. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20180352 ST [electronic version only]
Source

The Lancet, Vol. 376 (2010), No. 9748 (7 October), p. 1261-1271, 104 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.