| Literature DB >> 26303029 |
Christen Rachul1, Timothy Caulfield2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have demonstrated how the media has an influence on policy decisions and healthcare coverage. Studies of Canadian media have shown that news coverage often emphasizes and hypes certain aspects of high profile health debates. We hypothesized that in Canadian media coverage of access to healthcare issues about therapies and technologies including for rare diseases, the media would be largely sympathetic towards patients, thus adding to public debate that largely favors increased access to healthcare-even in the face of equivocal evidence regarding efficacy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26303029 PMCID: PMC4548449 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-015-0320-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Newspapers included in the sample
| Newspaper | # of articles | % of data set |
|---|---|---|
| The Globe and Mail | 86 | 16.2 % |
| The National Post | 31 | 5.8 % |
| The Vancouver Sun | 43 | 8.1 % |
| Victoria Times Colonist | 10 | 1.9 % |
| Calgary Herald | 48 | 9.1 % |
| Edmonton Journal | 29 | 5.5 % |
| Saskatoon Star Phoenix | 15 | 2.8 % |
| Regina Leader Post | 5 | 0.9 % |
| Winnipeg Free Press | 17 | 3.2 % |
| The Hamilton Spectator | 34 | 6.4 % |
| Ottawa Citizen | 70 | 13.2 % |
| The Toronto Star | 85 | 16.0 % |
| Montreal Gazette | 41 | 7.7 % |
| Daily Gleaner (Fredericton) | 9 | 1.7 % |
| Telegraph-Journal (St. John) | 7 | 1.3 % |
Top ten diseases, conditions, or issues identified in news articles
| # articles | % of articles | |
|---|---|---|
| Rare disease/orphan drugs | 120 | 22.6 % |
| Autism therapy | 75 | 14.2 % |
| Cancer treatment | 63 | 11.9 % |
| Fertility/IVF | 36 | 6.8 % |
| Screening/testing | 24 | 4.5 % |
| Infectious disease (e.g., HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, H1N1) | 19 | 3.6 % |
| Chronic diseases (non-rare) | 14 | 2.6 % |
| Mental health | 11 | 2.1 % |
| Persons with disabilities (intellectual, physical, etc.) | 11 | 2.1 % |
| Institutional/policy/physical barriers to access | 8 | 1.5 % |
Top ten access issues covered in news articles
| # articles | % of articles | |
|---|---|---|
| Scope of government healthcare coverage | 291 | 54.9 % |
| Barriers caused by high cost of treatment/service | 94 | 17.7 % |
| Treatment/service is unavailable | 56 | 10.6 % |
| Call for health policy reforms (e.g., orphan drug and catastrophic drug programs) | 52 | 9.8 % |
| Legal proceedings (e.g., court decision relevant to access) | 49 | 9.2 % |
| Access issues related to communication (e.g., access in language of choice) | 27 | 5.1 % |
| Need for more research on rare diseases | 24 | 4.5 % |
| Access issues related to transportation (e.g., no public transportation, service too far away) | 22 | 4.2 % |
| Public health initiatives aimed at increased access (e.g., vaccine programs, nutrition education) | 20 | 3.8 % |
| Health-related advocacy, fundraising, raising awareness about issues relevant to access | 19 | 3.6 % |
Top ten themes of news articles with example quotes
| # articles | % of articles | |
|---|---|---|
| Access needs to be improved or maintained | 103 | 19.4 % |
| “…she is fighting to maintain access to the treatment that allows her not only to live, but to take part in a regular exercise program and get some fun out of life.” [ | ||
| Government is letting citizens/residents down | 76 | 14.3 % |
| “The Lindberg family is now attempting a round of aggressive antibiotics—all of it privately funded as the Alberta health system refuses to acknowledge the diagnosis of Lyme disease, she said.” [ | ||
| Patient needs are priority | 71 | 13.4 % |
| “Pregnant women and their babies are among those experiencing the worst fallout from Ottawa's decision to scale back funding for refugee health care…” [ | ||
| Inequality in the healthcare system | 56 | 10.6 % |
| “If the Thepens lived in British Columbia, the treatment cost would have been picked up by the province. Without a universal drug plan, Canadians face a postal-code lottery.” [ | ||
| Healthcare policy must balance access and budget needs | 43 | 8.1 % |
| “The original lawsuit, brought by 29 families with autistic children, drew a heated rebuke from Mr. McGuinty who said he was concerned by a court ruling that requires a government to spend money it might not have.” [ | ||
| Health expenses are a burden on family, patient | 43 | 8.1 % |
| “A breast cancer patient has had to take out a line of credit to pay for a $50,000-a-year drug because her tumour—caught through a mammogram – was a smidgen too small to qualify for the medicine.” [ | ||
| Debate, controversy over treatment | 33 | 6.2 % |
| “Some provinces, such as British Columbia, have also refused to approve [HIFU], saying the data are not strong enough to allow the procedure to be done, even in the private sector. But it is approved and funded in some European countries such as England and Germany.” [ | ||
| Saves money, further health issues in the long-term | 29 | 5.5 % |
| “This would decrease the future costs on the health-care system caused by multiple births and spare infertile couples the health risks associated with having twins, triplets and quadruplets, said Bouzayen.” [ | ||
| Making necessary drugs/treatment affordable for patients | 18 | 3.4 % |
| “Hundreds of Ontario cancer patients, including many suffering from the most advanced and deadly versions of the disease, will have access to four costly new cancer drugs to be financed at public expense, the provincial government announced yesterday” [ | ||
| Right to access healthcare in language of choice | 16 | 3.0 % |
| “An English-speaking Cornwall-area woman intends to complain to the Ontario Human Rights Commission after being refused treatment at a Cornwall francophone health centre.” [ |
Fig. 1Tone of news articles each year