Literature DB >> 16971544

Whose deaths matter? Mortality, advocacy, and attention to disease in the mass media.

Elizabeth M Armstrong1, Daniel P Carpenter, Marie Hojnacki.   

Abstract

Diseases capture public attention in varied ways and to varying degrees. In this essay, we use a unique data set that we have collected about print and broadcast media attention to seven diseases across nineteen years in order to address two questions. First, how (if at all) is mortality related to attention? Second, how (if at all) is advocacy, in the form of organized interest group activity, related to media attention? Our analysis of the cross-disease and cross-temporal variation in media attention suggests that who suffers from a disease as well as how many suffer are critical factors in explaining why some diseases get more attention than others. In particular, our data reveal that both the print and the broadcast media tend to be much less attentive to diseases that disproportionately burden blacks relative to whites. We also find a positive link between the size of organizational communities that take an interest in disease and media attention, though this finding depends on the characteristics of those communities. Finally, this study also reveals the limitations of relying on single-disease case studies-and particularly HIV/AIDS-to understand how and why disease captures public attention. Many previous inferences about media attention that have been drawn from the case of AIDS are not reflective of the attention allocated to other diseases.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16971544     DOI: 10.1215/03616878-2006-002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law        ISSN: 0361-6878            Impact factor:   2.265


  5 in total

1.  Clarifying the relationship between symptoms and disability: a challenge with practical implications.

Authors:  Harvey Whiteford
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 49.548

2.  Coverage and framing of racial and ethnic health disparities in US newspapers, 1996-2005.

Authors:  Annice E Kim; Shiriki Kumanyika; Daniel Shive; Uzy Igweatu; Son-Ho Kim
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2010-02-10       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Patient advocacy organizations: institutional conflicts of interest, trust, and trustworthiness.

Authors:  Susannah L Rose
Journal:  J Law Med Ethics       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 1.718

4.  Quantifying the effect of media limitations on outbreak data in a global online web-crawling epidemic intelligence system, 2008-2011.

Authors:  David Scales; Alexei Zelenev; John S Brownstein
Journal:  Emerg Health Threats J       Date:  2013-11-08

5.  From GRID to gridlock: the relationship between scientific biomedical breakthroughs and HIV/AIDS policy in the US Congress.

Authors:  Matthew B Platt; Manu O Platt
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2013-11-27       Impact factor: 5.396

  5 in total

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