Literature DB >> 15383043

Framing as a cultural resource in health social movements: funding activism and the breast cancer movement in the US 1990-1993.

Emily S Kolker1.   

Abstract

Disease-specific funding activism in the US has required health social movements (HSMs) to draw on both structural and cultural resources in order to persuade audiences and to redefine dominant conceptions of disease. Using a social constructionist analysis of Congressional testimony and media accounts of breast cancer funding activism between 1990-1993, this paper demonstrates that the use of culturally resonant frames served as an important cultural resource for breast cancer activists in the early 1990s. The breast cancer movement's use of three interconnected and culturally resonant frames aided the movement in redefining breast cancer as a problem of individual women to a major public health problem in need of governmental attention. This research contributes to both social movement and HSM scholarship by demonstrating that cultural resources, in the form of movement frames, are as central to social movement analysis as structural resources.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15383043     DOI: 10.1111/j.0141-9889.2004.00420.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  9 in total

1.  Fast-food fights: news coverage of local efforts to improve food environments through land-use regulations, 2001-2013. [corrected].

Authors:  Laura Nixon; Pamela Mejia; Lori Dorfman; Andrew Cheyne; Sandra Young; Lissy C Friedman; Mark A Gottlieb; Heather Wooten
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2015-01-20       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Patient organizations in Finland: increasing numbers and great variation.

Authors:  Hanna K Toiviainen; Lauri H Vuorenkoski; Elina K Hemminki
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2010-06-23       Impact factor: 3.377

3.  Cancer and mastery: do age and cohort matter?

Authors:  Tetyana Pudrovska
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2010-07-13       Impact factor: 4.634

4.  What makes you stronger: age and cohort differences in personal growth after cancer.

Authors:  Tetyana Pudrovska
Journal:  J Health Soc Behav       Date:  2010-09

5.  Assessing the promise of user involvement in health service development: ethnographic study.

Authors:  Nina Fudge; Charles D A Wolfe; Christopher McKevitt
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2008-01-29

6.  Cigarettes become a dangerous product: tobacco in the rearview mirror, 1952-1965.

Authors:  Lori Dorfman; Andrew Cheyne; Mark A Gottlieb; Pamela Mejia; Laura Nixon; Lissy C Friedman; Richard A Daynard
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2013-11-14       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 7.  Framing and the health policy process: a scoping review.

Authors:  Adam D Koon; Benjamin Hawkins; Susannah H Mayhew
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2016-02-11       Impact factor: 3.344

8.  Challenging dominant breast cancer research agendas: perspectives on the outcomes of the interagency breast cancer and environment research coordinating committee.

Authors:  Lauren Richter
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2019-05-06       Impact factor: 5.984

9.  Hierarchy of hair loss stigma: media portrayals of cancer, alopecia areata, and cancer in Israeli newspapers.

Authors:  Daphna Yeshua-Katz; Shifra Shvarts; Dorit Segal-Engelchin
Journal:  Isr J Health Policy Res       Date:  2019-09-03
  9 in total

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