News coverage about aspirin as a countervailing force against low-dose aspirin campaign promotion.
Abstract
Organized health promotion efforts sometimes compete with news media, social media,
and other sources when providing recommendations for healthy behavior. In recent years,
patients have faced a complicated information environment regarding aspirin use as
a prevention tool for heart health. We explored the possibility that campaign promotion
of low-dose aspirin use might have been undermined by news coverage in the USA detailing
controversies regarding aspirin use. Using time series data on low-dose aspirin sales
in Minnesota, USA, we assessed whether news coverage of aspirin or audience engagement
with the Ask About Aspirin campaign website predicted subsequent changes in low-dose
aspirin sales, over and above any secular trend. News coverage predicted actual low-dose
aspirin purchases whereas exposure to a state-level campaign did not. While a campaign
effort to encourage people at risk to discuss low-dose aspirin use with their health
care providers did not generate substantive changes in low-dose aspirin tablet sales
in the areas of Minnesota monitored for this study, past news coverage about aspirin
use, including news about negative side effects, may have suppressed low-dose aspirin
sales during this same period. The extent of news coverage about aspirin and heart
health had a negative effect on tablet sales recorded in greater Minnesota approximately
a month later in an ARIMA time series model, coefficient = -.014, t = -2.33, p = .02.
Presented evidence of news coverage effect suggests health campaign assessment should
consider trends in the public information environment as potential countervailing
forces.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25077Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1093/tbm/ibab065Publication Info
Southwell, Brian G; Duval, Sue; Luepker, Russell V; Oldenburg, Niki; Van't Hof, Jeremy;
Eder, Milton; ... Finnegan, John (2021). News coverage about aspirin as a countervailing force against low-dose aspirin campaign
promotion. Translational behavioral medicine, 11(10). pp. 1941-1946. 10.1093/tbm/ibab065. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25077.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Brian Glen Southwell
Adjunct Professor in the Department of Medicine
Dr. Brian Southwell is an adjunct professor with Duke's Department of Medicine and
also has worked with the Social Science Research Institute and the Energy Initiative.
Southwell directs the Science in the Public Sphere program at RTI International and
also is a faculty member at UNC-Chapel Hill. He hosts The Measure of Everyday Life,
a weekly public radio

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