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Book

Public Health Communication

Book

Public Health Communication

DOI link for Public Health Communication

Public Health Communication book

Evidence for Behavior Change

Public Health Communication

DOI link for Public Health Communication

Public Health Communication book

Evidence for Behavior Change
Edited ByRobert Hornik
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2002
eBook Published 1 January 2002
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781410603029
Pages 452
eBook ISBN 9781410603029
Subjects Behavioral Sciences, Communication Studies
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Hornik, R. (Ed.). (2002). Public Health Communication: Evidence for Behavior Change (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781410603029

ABSTRACT

This volume argues the case that public health communication has affected health behavior. It brings together 16 studies of large-scale communication in a variety of substantive health areas--tobacco, drugs, AIDS, family planning, heart disease, childhood disease, highway safety--prepared by the authors who did the original research. These studies show important effects and illustrate the central conditions for success. The book also includes complementary analytic chapters which provide a meta-analysis of published results, some approaches to developing communication interventions, and alternative methods for evaluation of public health communication projects.

Including studies based on communication programs in the United States, as well as projects done elsewhere in the world, including Europe, Africa, Asia and Latin America, this book:
*offers a broad presentation of the alternative research designs that have been used to evaluate public health communication programs;
*includes a great range of approaches from field experiments and natural experiments to simple before-after and complex time series designs, using data gathered from individuals and from archives; and
*utilizes an innovative perspective on how to exercise public health communication from a leading and thoughtful practitioner.

As such, it is required reading for scholars, students, practitioners, and policymakers in public health, health communication, health psychology, and related areas.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |20 pages

Introduction Public Health Communication: Making Sense of Contradictory Evidence

ByRobert C. Hornik

part |2 pages

Part I: Deliberate Trials

chapter 1|12 pages

Using Mass Media to Prevent Cigarette Smoking

ByJohn K. Worden, Brian S. Flynn

chapter 2|22 pages

Television Campaigns and Sensation Seeking Targeting of Adolescent Marijuana Use: A Controlled Time Series Approach

ByPhilip Palmgreen, Lewis Donohew, Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch, Rick H. Hoyle, Michael T. Stephenson

chapter 3|14 pages

Long-Term Effectiveness of the Early Mass Media Led Antismoking Campaigns in Australia

ByJohn P. Pierce, Petra Macaskill, David Hill

part |2 pages

Part II: Evaluations of Full-Scale Interventions

chapter 4|12 pages

The Contributions of Public Health Education Toward the Reduction of Cardiovascular Disease Mortality: Experiences from the National High Blood Pressure Education Program

ByEdward J. Roccella

chapter 5|12 pages

Increasing Seat Belt Use in North Carolina

ByAllan F. Williams, JoAnn K. Wells, and Donald W. Reinfurt

chapter 6|18 pages

The California Tobacco Control Program: A Long-Term Health Communication Project

ByJohn P. Pierce, Sherry Emery, Elizabeth Gilpin

chapter 7|16 pages

The Impact of Antismoking Media Campaigns on Progression to Established Smoking: Results of a Longitudinal Youth Study in Massachusetts

ByMichael Siegel, Lois Biener

chapter 8|16 pages

Evaluating AIDS Public Education in Europe: A Cross-National Comparison

ByKaye Wellings

chapter 9|16 pages

Effects of a Mass Media Campaign to Prevent AIDS Among Young People in Ghana

BySusan McCombie, Robert C. Hornik, John K. Anarfi

chapter 10|16 pages

Changes in Sun-Related Attitudes and Behaviors, and Reduced Sunburn Prevalence in a Population at High Risk of Melanoma

ByDavid Hill, Victoria White, Robin Marks, Ron Borland

chapter 11|18 pages

Impact of a Mass Media Vasectomy Promotion Campaign in Brazil

ByD. Lawrence Kincaid, Alice Payne Merritt, Liza Nickerson, Sandra de Castro Buffington, Marcos Paulo P. de Castro, and Bernadete Martin de Castro

chapter 12|22 pages

Improving Vaccination Coverage in Urban Areas Through a Health Communication Campaign: The 1990 Philippines Experience

BySusan Zimicki, Robert C. Hornik, Cecelia C. Verzosa, José R. Hernandez, Eleanora de Guzman, Manolet Dayrit, Adora Fausto, and Mary Bessie Lee

chapter 13|30 pages

Communication in Support of Child Survival: Evidence and Explanations From Eight Countries

ByRobert C. Hornik, Judith McDivitt, Susan Zimicki, P. Stanley Yoder, Eduardo Contreras-Budge, Jeffrey McDowell, Mark Rasmuson

part |2 pages

Part III: Media Coverage and Health Behavior

chapter 14|14 pages

Impact of Persuasive Information on Secular Trends in Health-Related Behaviors

ByDavid P. Fan

chapter 15|24 pages

The Effects of Professional and Media Warnings About the Association Between Aspirin Use in Children and Reye’s Syndrome

ByStephen B. Soumerai, Dennis Ross-Degnan, Jessica Spira Kahn

chapter 16|24 pages

Reflections on Community Health Campaigns: Secular Trends and the Capacity to Effect Change

ByKasisomayajula Viswanath and John R. Finnegan, Jr.

part |2 pages

Part IV: Cross-Case Overviews

chapter 17|12 pages

“Behavioral Journalism” Accelerates Diffusion of Healthy Innovations

ByAlfred L. McAlister, Maria Fernandez

chapter 18|30 pages

From Prevention Vaccines to Community Care: New Ways to Look at Program Success

ByWilliam Smith

chapter 19|28 pages

A Meta-Analysis of U.S. Health Campaign Effects on Behavior: Emphasize Enforcement, Exposure, and New Information, and Beware the Secular Trend

ByLeslie B. Snyder, Mark A. Hamilton
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