Using Theory to Design Evaluations of Communication Campaigns: The Case of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign.

We present a general theory about how campaigns can have effects and suggest that the evaluation of communication campaigns must be driven by a theory of effects. The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign illustrates both the theory of campaign effects and implications that theory has for the evaluation design. Often models of effect assume that individual exposure affects cognitions that continue to affect behavior over a short term. Contrarily, effects may operate through social or institutional paths as well as through individual learning, require substantial levels of exposure achieved through multiple channels over time, take time to accumulate detectable change, and affect some members of the audience but not others. Responsive evaluations will choose appropriate units of analysis and comparison groups, data collection schedules sensitive to lagged effects, samples able to detect subgroup effects, and analytic strategies consistent with the theory of effects that guides the campaign.

[1]  R. Hornik Public health communication: Evidence for behavior change. , 2013 .

[2]  Kim Walsh-Childers,et al.  Public Health Communication: Evidence for Behavior Change , 2003 .

[3]  I. Yanovitzky,et al.  Effect of news coverage on the prevalence of drunk-driving behavior: evidence from a longitudinal study. , 2002, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[4]  Jane D. Brown,et al.  EFFECTS OF MEDIA ON PERSONAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH , 2002 .

[5]  R. Hornik,et al.  Theories and Evidence: Mass Media Effects and Fertility Change , 2001 .

[6]  Itzhak Yanovitzky,et al.  Mass Media, Social Norms, and Health Promotion Efforts , 2001, Commun. Res..

[7]  L. Donohew,et al.  Television campaigns and adolescent marijuana use: tests of sensation seeking targeting. , 2001, American journal of public health.

[8]  E M Rogers,et al.  Effects of an entertainment-education radio soap opera on family planning behavior in Tanzania. , 1999, Studies in family planning.

[9]  I. Yanovitzky,et al.  Media Attention, Institutional Response, and Health Behavior Change , 1999 .

[10]  Kenneth W Griffin,et al.  Alcohol and marijuana use among rural youth: interaction of social and intrapersonal influences. , 1998, Addictive behaviors.

[11]  W. DeJong,et al.  Strategies to reduce driving under the influence of alcohol. , 1998, Annual review of public health.

[12]  Gary J. Badger,et al.  Using Mass Media to Prevent Cigarette Smoking Among Adolescent Girls , 1996, Health education quarterly.

[13]  T. Hu,et al.  Reducing cigarette consumption in California: tobacco taxes vs an anti-smoking media campaign. , 1995, American journal of public health.

[14]  William Sack,et al.  At the Threshold: The Developing Adolescent , 1992 .

[15]  D. Kincaid,et al.  Mass media family planning promotion in three Nigerian cities. , 1990, Studies in family planning.

[16]  Charles K. Atkin,et al.  Mass Communication and Public Health: Complexities and Conflicts , 1990 .

[17]  G. W. Bailey,et al.  Current perspectives on substance abuse in youth. , 1989, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[18]  A. Bandura Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A Social Cognitive Theory , 1985 .

[19]  K. Warner Cigarette smoking in the 1970's: the impact of the antismoking campaign on consumption. , 1981, Science.

[20]  I. Ajzen,et al.  Belief, Attitude, Intention, and Behavior: An Introduction to Theory and Research , 1977 .

[21]  M. Becker,et al.  Health Belief Model and Personal Health Behavior , 1976 .

[22]  W. A. Zellmer Editorial: the National High Blood Pressure Education Program. , 1975, American journal of hospital pharmacy.

[23]  R. Hornik,et al.  Evaluation of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign: Fifth Semi-Annual Report of Findings , 2003 .

[24]  Robert C. Hornik,et al.  Introduction Public Health Communication: Making Sense of Contradictory Evidence , 2002 .

[25]  Kaye Wellings,et al.  Evaluating AIDS public education in Europe: a cross-national comparison , 2002 .

[26]  Thomas W. Valente,et al.  Evaluating Communication Campaigns , 2001 .

[27]  S. Coopman,et al.  Health communication research: A guide to developments and directions , 2000 .

[28]  R. Hornik,et al.  Improving vaccination coverage in urban areas through a health communication campaign: the 1990 Philippine experience. , 1994, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[29]  E. Oetting,et al.  Similarity in drug use patterns between adolescents and their friends. , 1993, Adolescence.

[30]  S. Soumerai,et al.  Effects of professional and media warnings about the association between aspirin use in children and Reye's syndrome. , 1992, The Milbank quarterly.

[31]  L. Wallack Media advocacy: Promoting health through mass communication , 1990 .

[32]  I. Rosenstock,et al.  The health belief model: Explaining health behavior through expectancies. , 1990 .

[33]  B. B. Brown,et al.  Peer groups and peer cultures. , 1990 .

[34]  William J. McGuire,et al.  The Myth of Massive Media Impact: Savagings and Salvagings , 1986 .

[35]  Icek Ajzen,et al.  From Intentions to Actions: A Theory of Planned Behavior , 1985 .