Unsettled sleep: The construction and consequences of a public health media campaign.

Item

Title
Unsettled sleep: The construction and consequences of a public health media campaign.
Identifier
AAI3283137
identifier
3283137
Creator
Hackett, Martine.
Contributor
Adviser: Barbara Katz Rothman
Date
2007
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Sociology, Individual and Family Studies | Health Sciences, Public Health | Mass Communications
Abstract
Public health media campaigns involve more than simply transmitting information to its audience: they advocate deep social change that involves the embodiment of specific values, lifestyles, and behaviors. Social factors are involved in what issue becomes a public health media campaign and how the messages are created and communicated. Once presented, there are implications and expectations for how these messages are to be received. There are also consequences of public health media campaigns that may cause harm as well as good. This dissertation examines what is underlying the creation, implementation and dissemination of a public health campaign. The Back to Sleep campaign to reduce the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is used as a case study. A multi dimensional methodology of interviews, participant observation, and content analysis diagnoses the underlying factors that go into constructing a national public health media campaign, as well as the campaign's intended and unintended consequences.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs