‘Chapter overviews, subheadings, and summaries facilitate a quick reading and review for graduate students and busy professionals in public health, the social sciences, communication, and related health policy-making fields.’
–Academic Library Book Review
How do you design an effective health campaign message? Designing Health Messages explores this question from both theoretical and practical perspectives. The authors, all well-known for cutting-edge research in their field, demonstrate the necessity of basing message design decisions on appropriate theories of human behavior and communication effectiveness by synthesizing and integrating knowledge and insights from communication and health behavior change. Part I covers theory-driven approaches and includes content and linguistic considerations, the role of fear in content, and using positive affect. Part II discusses audience-centered strategies and looks at the ‘America Responds to AIDS’ campaign and the Cancer Communication′s ‘5 a Day for Better Health’ program. This comprehensive volume concludes with recent developments and policy and administrative practices for health message design.
A much-needed book, Designing Health Messages is an indispensable resource and an essential aid for professors, students, and professionals in communication, specifically mass communication, and public health.
‘This book would make a strong addition to a graduate-level course on health communication. With complementary reading to broaden students′′ knowledge of the core theories and empirical research applied by these authors to message design, this book would enhance students′′ capacity to link health communication theory and practice.’
–Health Policy and Planning
Table of Content
PART ONE: THEORY-DRIVEN APPROACHES TO HEALTH MESSAGE DESIGN
Motivation to Attend to Health Messages – Roxanne Louiselle Parrott
Presentation of Content and Linguistic Considerations
Encouraging Risk Reduction – David R Holtgrave, Barbara J Tinsley and Linda S Kay
A Decision-Making Approach to Message Design
Moving People to Behavior Change – Edward W Maibach and David Cotton
A Staged Social Cognitive Approach to Message Design
Fear Appeals in Health Promotion Campaigns – Jerold L Hale and James Price Dillard
Too Much, Too Little, or Just Right?
Thinking Positively – Jennifer L Monahan
Using Positive Affect When Designing Health Messages
Designing Messages for Behavioral Inoculation – Michael Pfau
Reaching Young Audiences – Erica Weintraub Austin
Developmental Considerations in Designing Health Messages
Fishing for Success – Kim Witte
Using the Persuasive Health Message Framework to Generate Effective Campaign Messages
PART TWO: AUDIENCE-CENTERED STRATEGIES FOR HEALTH MESSAGE DESIGN
Using Research to Inform Campaign Development and Message Design – Glen J Nowak and Michael J Siska
Examples from the `American Responds to AIDS′ Campaign
Choosing Audience Segmentation Strategies and Methods for Health Communication – Michael D Slater
The Gatekeeping Process – John Mc Grath
The Right Combinations to Unlock the Gates
Use of Database Marketing and Consumer-Based Health Communication in Message Design – R Craig Lefebvre et al
An Example From the Office of Cancer Communication′s `5 a Day for Better Health′ Program
PART THREE: COMBINING THEORY AND PRACTICE: ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
Supplementing Health Campaign Messages – Sharon Lee Hammond
Recent Developments in Informing Patients about Their Prescription Drugs
Enabling Health – Roxanne Louiselle Parrott, Mary Louise Kahl and Edward W Maibach
Policy and Administrative Practices at a Crossroads
About the author
I emphasize the processes and outcomes associated with communication about health. My recent research focuses on the design of health messages to promote behavioral adaptation in situations where individuals are unable, unwilling, and/or unlikely to avoid situations and practices that put their health at risk. I have applied a behavioral adaptation approach to farmers′ sun protection practices and am currently investigating its utility for involving the lay public in understanding the implications of human genetics research and information for personal well-being. I utilize a community-based approach in the dissemination of behavioral adaptation messages.