From Press Release to News: Mapping the Framing of the 2009 H1N1 A Influenza Pandemic

Pandemics challenge conventional assumptions about health promotion, message development, community engagement, and the role of news media. To understand the use of press releases in news coverage of pandemics, this study traces the development of framing devices from a government public health agency's press releases to news stories about the 2009 H1N1 A influenza pandemic. The communication management of the H1N1 pandemic, an international news event with local implications, by the Singapore government is a rich locus for understanding the dynamics of public relations, health communication, and journalism. A content analysis shows that the evolution of information from press release to news is marked by significant changes in media frames, including the expansion and diversification in dominant frames and emotion appeals, stronger thematic framing, more sources of information, conversion of loss frames into gain frames, and amplification of positive tone favoring the public health agency's position. Contrary to previous research that suggests that government information subsidies passed almost unchanged through media gatekeepers, the news coverage of the pandemic reflects journalists’ selectivity in disseminating the government press releases and in mediating the information flow and frames from the press releases.

[1]  John A Updegraff,et al.  Health Message Framing Effects on Attitudes, Intentions, and Behavior: A Meta-analytic Review , 2012, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

[2]  Dietram A. Scheufele,et al.  New voters, new outlook? Predispositions, social networks, and the changing politics of gay civil rights. , 2011, Social science quarterly.

[3]  K. Namkoong,et al.  Media, Social Proximity, and Risk: A Comparative Analysis of Newspaper Coverage of Avian Flu in Hong Kong and in the United States , 2011, Journal of health communication.

[4]  Darren L. Linvill,et al.  Public Health Framing of News Regarding Childhood Obesity in the United States , 2010, Health communication.

[5]  Eran N. Ben-Porath,et al.  News Images, Race, and Attribution in the Wake of Hurricane Katrina , 2010 .

[6]  Carl H. Botan,et al.  Building a Theoretical Model of Media Relations Using Framing, Information Subsidies, and Agenda-Building , 2010 .

[7]  P. Sharpe,et al.  Newspaper content analysis in evaluation of a community-based participatory project to increase physical activity. , 2010, Health education research.

[8]  Bay O’Leary,et al.  Social Marketing and Distracted Driving Behaviors among Young Adults: The Effectiveness of Fear Appeals , 2010 .

[9]  Lijiang Shen,et al.  The Effect of Message Frame in Anti-Smoking Public Service Announcements on Cognitive Response and Attitude Toward Smoking , 2010, Health communication.

[10]  Hyojung Park,et al.  Using Public Relations to Promote Health: A Framing Analysis of Public Relations Strategies Among Health Associations , 2010, Journal of health communication.

[11]  W. Hallman,et al.  When Good Food Goes Bad , 2009 .

[12]  E. Vaughan,et al.  Effective health risk communication about pandemic influenza for vulnerable populations. , 2009, American journal of public health.

[13]  R. Vaughan AJPH endorsement of transparency, clarity, and rigor. , 2009, American journal of public health.

[14]  D. Brossard,et al.  News coverage of public health issues: the role of news sources and the processes of news construction. , 2009 .

[15]  J. Barry Pandemics: avoiding the mistakes of 1918 , 2009, Nature.

[16]  Steven Woloshin,et al.  Press Releases by Academic Medical Centers: Not So Academic? , 2009, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[17]  J. Stryker,et al.  The HPV vaccine: a content analysis of online news stories. , 2009, Journal of women's health.

[18]  P. Stephanie Market driven Journalism , 2008 .

[19]  Kaye D. Sweetser,et al.  Information subsidies and agenda-building during the Israel–Lebanon crisis , 2008 .

[20]  D. Lehmann,et al.  Designing Effective Health Communications: A Meta-Analysis , 2008 .

[21]  B. Holmes,et al.  Communicating about emerging infectious disease: The importance of research , 2008 .

[22]  D. Brossard,et al.  Media Coverage of Public Health Epidemics: Linking Framing and Issue Attention Cycle Toward an Integrated Theory of Print News Coverage of Epidemics , 2008 .

[23]  Matthew Beverlin,et al.  Media Framing and Racial Attitudes in the Aftermath of Katrina , 2007 .

[24]  Jeff Niederdeppe,et al.  Newspaper Coverage as Indirect Effects of a Health Communication Intervention , 2007, Commun. Res..

[25]  Michael F. Dahlstrom,et al.  Reporting a Potential Pandemic , 2007 .

[26]  Dietram A. Scheufele,et al.  Framing, Agenda Setting, and Priming: The Evolution of Three Media Effects Models , 2007 .

[27]  Joyce M. Wolburg College Students’ Responses to Antismoking Messages: Denial, Defiance, and Other Boomerang Effects , 2006 .

[28]  Chad Raphael,et al.  Interpersonal divide: The search for community in a technological age ‐ by Michael Bugeja , 2006 .

[29]  Min Wu Framing AIDS in China: A Comparative Analysis of US and Chinese Wire News Coverage of HIV/AIDS in China , 2006 .

[30]  Sooyoung Cho The Power of Public Relations in Media Relations: A National Survey of Health PR Practitioners , 2006 .

[31]  B. Rimer,et al.  Advancing Tailored Health Communication: A Persuasion and Message Effects Perspective , 2006 .

[32]  Karen M. Emmons,et al.  Message Effects and Social Determinants of Health: Its Application to Cancer Disparities , 2006 .

[33]  Dietram A. Scheufele,et al.  The Public and Nanotechnology: How Citizens Make Sense of Emerging Technologies , 2005 .

[34]  Xiang Zhou,et al.  Within the Boundaries of Politics: News Framing of Sars in China and the United States , 2005 .

[35]  Joe Bob Hester Setting the Agenda: The Mass Media and Public Opinion , 2005 .

[36]  Concetta M. Stewart,et al.  Framing the SARS Crisis: A Computer-Assisted Text Analysis of CNN and BBC Online News Reports of SARS , 2005 .

[37]  Patrick Wallis,et al.  Disease metaphors in new epidemics: the UK media framing of the 2003 SARS epidemic , 2005, Social Science & Medicine (1967).

[38]  Guy J. Golan,et al.  Agenda Setting and International News: Media Influence on Public Perceptions of Foreign Nations , 2004 .

[39]  Andrea Tanner,et al.  Agenda Building, Source Selection, and Health News at Local Television Stations , 2004 .

[40]  Don Heider,et al.  Race and Ethnicity in local Television News: Framing, Story Assignments, and Source Selections , 2003 .

[41]  Link,et al.  Framing Europe: Television News and European Integration , 2003 .

[42]  Bruce V. Lewenstein,et al.  Biotechnology and the American Media , 2002 .

[43]  J. Peter,et al.  Framing Politics at the Launch of the Euro: A Cross-National Comparative Study of Frames in the News , 2001 .

[44]  Kim Witte,et al.  A Meta-Analysis of Fear Appeals: Implications for Effective Public Health Campaigns , 2000, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.

[45]  Dietram A. Scheufele,et al.  Agenda-Setting, Priming, and Framing Revisited: Another Look at Cognitive Effects of Political Communication , 2000 .

[46]  E. López-Escobar,et al.  Setting the agenda of attributes in the 1996 Spanish general election , 2000 .

[47]  David C. Coulson,et al.  Comparative Case Study: Newspaper Source Use on the Environmental Beat , 2000 .

[48]  Julie L. Andsager,et al.  Social or Economic Concerns: How News and Women's Magazines Framed Breast Cancer in the 1990s , 1999 .

[49]  Julie L. Andsager,et al.  How Newspapers Framed Breast Implants in the 1990s , 1999 .

[50]  Lucila Vargas,et al.  U.S. Latino Newspapers as Health Communication Resources: A Content Analysis , 1999 .

[51]  Dietram A. Scheufele,et al.  Framing as a theory of media effects , 1999 .

[52]  Frank D. Durham News frames as social narratives : TWA flight 800 , 1998 .

[53]  Klaus R. Scherer,et al.  The Role of Injustice in the Elicitation of Differential Emotional Reactions , 1998 .

[54]  L. Donohew,et al.  Applications of a theoretic model of information exposure to health interventions. , 1998, Human communication research.

[55]  J. Cappella,et al.  Spiral of Cynicism: The Press and the Public Good , 1997 .

[56]  Simon Chapman,et al.  'A healthy lifestyle might be the death of you': discourses on diet, cholesterol control and heart disease in the press and among the lay public , 1995 .

[57]  P. Lang The emotion probe. Studies of motivation and attention. , 1995, The American psychologist.

[58]  Robert M. Entman,et al.  Framing: Toward Clarification of a Fractured Paradigm , 1993 .

[59]  Mark N. Popovich,et al.  Newsmagazine Visuals and the 1988 Presidential Election , 1991 .

[60]  W. Bennett,et al.  Toward a Theory of Press-State Relations in the United States , 1990 .

[61]  William A. Gamson,et al.  News as Framing , 1989 .

[62]  W. Gamson,et al.  Media Discourse and Public Opinion on Nuclear Power: A Constructionist Approach , 1989, American Journal of Sociology.

[63]  S. Chaiken,et al.  The effect of message framing on breast self-examination attitudes, intentions, and behavior. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[64]  Vincent Mosco,et al.  Reading the News , 1986 .

[65]  J. V. Turk Information subsidies and influence , 1985 .

[66]  O. Gandy Information in health: subsidised news , 1980 .

[67]  A. Tversky,et al.  Decision, probability, and utility: Prospect theory: An analysis of decision under risk , 1979 .

[68]  M. Defleur,et al.  A Dependency Model of Mass-Media Effects , 1976 .

[69]  Gaye Tuchman Objectivity as Strategic Ritual: An Examination of Newsmen's Notions of Objectivity , 1972, American Journal of Sociology.

[70]  Glen M. Broom,et al.  Cutlip and Center's Effective Public Relations , 2009 .

[71]  A. Oberschall,et al.  The whole world is watching : mass media in the making & unmaking of the New Left : with a new preface , 2003 .

[72]  Patricia A. Curtin Reevaluating Public Relations Information Subsidies: Market-Driven Journalism and Agenda-Building Theory and Practice , 1999 .

[73]  Lynne M. Sallot,et al.  Public Relations and the Production of News: A Critical Review and Theoretical Framework , 1997 .

[74]  J. Pincus,et al.  Newspaper Editors' Perceptions of Public Relations: How Business, News, and Sports Editors Differ , 1993 .

[75]  S. Iyengar Is anyone responsible? How television frames political issues. , 1991 .

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

[77]  Dan Berkowitz,et al.  Refining the gatekeeping metaphor for local television news , 1990 .

[78]  Martin Fishbein,et al.  Using the theory of reasoned action as a framework for understanding and changing AIDS-related behaviors. , 1989 .

[79]  R. Rogers Cognitive and physiological processes in fear appeals and attitude change: a revised theory of prote , 1983 .

[80]  Joseph R. Dominick,et al.  Mass Media Research: An Introduction , 1983 .

[81]  O. Gandy Beyond Agenda Setting: Information Subsidies and Public Policy , 1982 .

[82]  C. Levitt,et al.  "The Whole World Is Watching": Mass Media in the Making and Unmaking of the New Left , 1981 .

[83]  I. Janis,et al.  Effect of fear-arousing communications. , 1953, Journal of abnormal psychology.