An Experimental Test of the Effects of Public Mockery of a Social Media Health Campaign: Implications for Theory and Health Organizations' Social Media Strategies

被引:0
|
作者
Myrick, Jessica Gall [1 ,4 ]
Chen, Jin [2 ]
Jang, Eunchae [1 ]
Norman, Megan P. [1 ]
Liu, Yansheng [1 ]
Medina, Lana [1 ]
Blessing, Janine N. [3 ]
Parhizkar, Haniyeh [1 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Donald P Bellisario Coll Commun, University Pk, PA USA
[2] Grand Valley State Univ, Sch Commun, Allendale, MI 49401 USA
[3] Univ Augsburg, Dept Media Knowledge & Commun, Augsburg, Germany
[4] Penn State Univ USA, Donald P Bellisario Coll Commun, 104 Carnegie Bldg, University Pk, PA 16801 USA
关键词
SELF-EFFICACY; HUMOR STYLES; FEAR APPEALS; IMPACT; RISK; MODEL; CONTEXT; NORMS; FOCUS;
D O I
10.1080/10410236.2023.2282833
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
This study explored how social media users' mocking of a public health campaign can affect other users' emotions, cognitions, and behavioral intentions. Inspired by public mocking of the CDC's "Say No to Raw Dough" campaign aiming to prevent food poisoning caused by eating raw flour-based products, this experiment (N = 681) employed a 2 (Public responses to a PSA: Mocking or serious) x 3 (Organizational response to public responses: Self-mocking, serious, or none) + 1 (control condition) design. Statistical tests revealed that user-generated mocking can lower intentions to avoid the health risk by decreasing perceptions of injunctive norms (that is, seeing others mock a public health campaign resulted in weaker perceptions that others think you should avoid the risky behavior). Mockery of a public health campaign also engender anger at the CDC and at other users, with the target of the anger having differential effects on intentions to avoid eating raw dough. Implications for theory and the practice of social media-based health promotion are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:2658 / 2670
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Social Media and Suicide: A Public Health Perspective
    Luxton, David D.
    June, Jennifer D.
    Fairall, Jonathan M.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2012, 102 : S195 - S200
  • [2] The Effect of Health Beliefs, Media Perceptions, and Communicative Behaviors on Health Behavioral Intention: An Integrated Health Campaign Model on Social Media
    Yoo, Sun-Wook
    Kim, Jarim
    Lee, Yeunjae
    HEALTH COMMUNICATION, 2018, 33 (01) : 32 - 40
  • [3] Social Media and Sleep Health
    Hale, Lauren
    Hartstein, Lauren E.
    Ceranoglu, Tolga Atilla
    PEDIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2025, 72 (02) : 165 - 173
  • [4] Effects of Social Media on Social, Mental, and Physical Health Traits of Youngsters
    Tripathi, Gautami
    Ahad, Mohd Abdul
    COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE IN DATA MINING, 2019, 711 : 685 - 695
  • [5] Weight Stigma and Social Media: Evidence and Public Health Solutions
    Clark, Olivia
    Lee, Matthew M.
    Jingree, Muksha Luxmi
    O'Dwyer, Erin
    Yue, Yiyang
    Marrero, Abrania
    Tamez, Martha
    Bhupathiraju, Shilpa N.
    Mattei, Josiemer
    FRONTIERS IN NUTRITION, 2021, 8
  • [6] The Role of Social Capital in Health Communication Campaigns: The Case of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign
    Lee, Chul-joo
    COMMUNICATION RESEARCH, 2014, 41 (02) : 208 - 235
  • [7] What motivates health information exchange in social media? The roles of the social cognitive theory and perceived interactivity
    Lin, Hsien-Cheng
    Chang, Chun-Ming
    INFORMATION & MANAGEMENT, 2018, 55 (06) : 771 - 780
  • [8] Precision Public Health Campaign: Delivering Persuasive Messages to Relevant Segments Through Targeted Advertisements on Social Media
    An, Jisun
    Kwak, Haewoon
    Qureshi, Hanya M.
    Weber, Ingmar
    JMIR FORMATIVE RESEARCH, 2021, 5 (09)
  • [9] Health Journalists' Social Media Sourcing During the Early Outbreak of the Public Health Emergency
    Zhang, Xinzhi
    Zhu, Rui
    JOURNALISM PRACTICE, 2024, 18 (07) : 1660 - 1680
  • [10] Mental health of social media influencers
    Bray, Isabelle
    Lerigo-Sampson, Moya
    Morey, Yvette
    Williams, Joanne
    JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH, 2024, 66 (01)