47 results on '"Amelia, Burke-Garcia"'
Search Results
2. The 'Real World'? Effects of Online Communication about Prostate Cancer on Offline Communication
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia and Kevin B. Wright
- Subjects
Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 - Abstract
Introduction: Online peer-to-peer social support programs are based on the premise that support from others who have been through a similar experience can help reduce the negative impacts of disease. Such support programs are increasingly found online, but how these conversations translate into real world interactions about health concerns is currently not well understood. Methods: Grounded in social network theory, this formative study explored how participants in an online prostate cancer community comprised of patients and their families translate their online conversations into offline ones. A survey was designed and fielded, and received 157 complete responses. Results: Results support prior research findings that these offline conversations are primarily information-oriented (n = 105) and extend them by the finding that members of online prostate cancer social support communities do, in fact, share information obtained online with others offline (n = 103). Family members appear to be primary receivers of this information (n = 121) while health care providers are not, which may impact treatment and care. Conclusions: The opportunity to tie more concretely online messages with offline conversations is of critical importance and interest. Recommendations are presented for future research. Keywords: Prostate cancer, Online communities, Social networks, Interpersonal communication, Social media
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A review of social media methods and lessons learned from the National Children’s Study
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia, Kate Winseck, Leslie Cooke Jouvenal, David Hubble, and Kathryn M. Kulbicki
- Subjects
Longitudinal research ,participant retention ,social media ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Given the reach and influence of social media, the National Children’s Study Vanguard Study evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, and cost of using social media to support participant retention. Methods We describe a social media experiment designed to assess the impact of social media on participant retention, discuss several key considerations for integrating social media into longitudinal research, and review factors that may influence engagement in research-related social media. Results User participation varied but was most active when at launch. During the short life of the private online community, a total of 39 participants joined. General enthusiasm about the prospect of the online community was indicated. There were many lessons learned throughout the process in areas such as privacy, security, and Institutional Review Board clearance. These are described in detail. Conclusions The opportunity to engage participants in longitudinal research using online social networks is enticing; however, more research is needed to consider the feasibility of their use in an ongoing manner. Recommendations are presented for future research seeking to use social media to improve retention in longitudinal research.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A tale of two tools: Reliability and feasibility of social media measurement tools examining e-cigarette twitter mentions
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia and Cassandra A. Stanton
- Subjects
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Given 70% of Americans are seeking health information online, social media are becoming main sources of health-related information and discussions. Specifically, compounding rising trends in use of e-cigarettes in the US, there has been a rapid rise in e-cigarette marketing â much of which is happening on social media. Public health professionals seeking to understand consumer knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about e-cigarettes should consider analyzing social media data and to do so, there are numerous free and paid tools available. However, each uses different sources and processes, which makes data validation challenging. This exploratory study sought to understand the reliability and feasibility of two social media data tools analyzing e-cigarette tweets. Twitter mentions were pulled from two different industry standard tools (GNIP and Radian6) and data were evaluated on six measures, e.g. Cost, Feasibility, Ease of Use, Poster Type (individual/organization), Context (tweet content analysis), and Valence (positive/negative). Findings included similarities amongst the data sets in terms of the content themes but differences in cost and ease of use of the tools themselves. These findings align with prior research, notably that e-cigarette marketing tweets are most common and public health-related content is noticeably absent. Findings from this exploratory study can inform future social media studies as well as communication campaigns seeking to address the emerging issue of e-cigarette use. Keywords: E-cigarettes, Vaping, Twitter, Tweets, Social media
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Introducing How Right Now and Other Pandemic Communication Efforts
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Dimensions of Crisis and Emergency Response Communication
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Audience Group Experiences
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Phases of Messaging
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Pandemic Communication in Our Current Media and Communication Environment
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. A Brief History of Pandemic Communication
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Building a Team and a Communication Campaign in the Middle of a Global Pandemic
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Disparities Already Existed—The Pandemic Just Exacerbated Them
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Conclusions, Lessons Learned, and a Vision for the Future
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Communicating Through a Pandemic
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Leveraging social and digital media for participant recruitment: A review of methods from the Bayley Short Form Formative Study
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia and Sunitha Mathew
- Subjects
Child development ,Bayley ,social media ,recruitment. ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Social media is increasingly being used in research, including recruitment. Methods For the Bayley Short Form Formative Study, which was conducted under the the National Children’s Study, traditional methods of recruitment proved to be ineffective. Therefore, digital media were identified as potential channels for recruitment. Results Results included successful recruitment of over 1800 infant and toddler participants to the Study. Conclusions This paper outlines the methods, results, and future research opportunities.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Assessment of Mental Health and Coping Disparities Among Racial and Ethnic Groups Amid COVID-19 From the 'How Right Now' Campaign
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia, Jennifer Berktold, Lucy Rabinowitz, Laura Wagstaff, Craig W. Thomas, Cynthia Crick, Michele S. Walsh, Elizabeth W. Mitchell, Jorge M. Vallery Verlenden, Richard Puddy, Melissa C. Mercado, Kanru Xia, Tola Aina, Larisa Caicedo, and Pierce Nelson, BA
- Subjects
Mental Health ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,COVID-19 ,Pandemics ,United States - Abstract
Objectives: How Right Now (HRN) is an evidence-based, culturally responsive communication campaign developed to facilitate coping and resilience among US groups disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. To inform the development of this campaign, we examined patterns in emotional health, stress, and coping strategies among HRN’s audiences, focusing on differences among racial and ethnic groups. Methods: We used a national probability panel, AmeriSpeak, to collect survey data from HRN’s priority audience members in English and Spanish at 2 time points (May 2020 and May 2021). We conducted statistical testing to examine differences between time points for each subgroup (Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black, and non-Hispanic White) and differences among subgroups at each time point. Results: We found disparities in COVID-19–related mental health challenges and differences in coping strategies. Non-Hispanic Black respondents were more likely than non-Hispanic White respondents to report challenges related to the social determinants of health, such as affording food and housing (26.4% vs 9.4% in May 2020) and experiencing personal financial loss (46.6% vs 29.2% in May 2020). In May 2021, 30.6% of Hispanic respondents reported being unable to meet basic food or housing needs versus 8.2% of non-Hispanic White respondents, and 51.6% reported personal financial loss versus 26.5% of non-Hispanic White respondents. Conclusions: Our study further illuminates what is needed to build emotional well-being pathways for people who historically have been economically and socially marginalized. Our findings underscore the need for public health interventions to provide culturally responsive mental health support to populations disproportionately affected by COVID-19 during the pandemic and into the future, with a focus on racial and ethnic disparities.
- Published
- 2022
17. Understanding the messages and motivation of vaccine hesitant or refusing social media influencers
- Author
-
Philip M. Massey, Amelia Burke-Garcia, Jill B. Roark, and Amy Leader
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030231 tropical medicine ,Information Dissemination ,Ethnic group ,Exploratory research ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Mainstream ,Social media ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Health communication ,Motivation ,Vaccines ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Public health ,Vaccination ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Public relations ,Influencer marketing ,Infectious Diseases ,Molecular Medicine ,Comprehension ,Psychology ,business ,Social Media - Abstract
Background While anti-vaccine messages on social media have been studied for content, reach, and effectiveness, less is known about those who create and promote the messages. Online influencers, or ‘everyday people who are influential within their online social networks’, are viewed as trusted voices who are often making similar life decisions as their followers. Therefore, their experiences with and perspectives on health issues can be persuasive. Methods We collaborated with a formal network of online influencers to interview, using a semi-structured interview guide, vaccine hesitant influencer mothers about their views on vaccination; their process for developing health-related social media content; their motivation to promote anti-vaccine messages; and their opinions on current vaccination messaging. Prescreening ensured a diverse sample by race/ethnicity, age, education, number of children, and geographic residence. Interviews occurred by telephone, were audio recorded, and transcribed. Themes were generated independently by two coders using a deductive coding approach. Results We interviewed 15 online influencer mothers from across the U.S. (average age 39 years old; all married; 13 Caucasian, 1 African American, 1 Hispanic). In some capacity, 5 of the 15 wrote about vaccination on their blog. Those who chose not to post anti-vaccine content did so for fear of alienating followers or having their platform be the site of combative discourse among readers. When researching their social media posts, the influencers did not trust mainstream sources of health information and relied on alternative sources and search engines. Implications: This exploratory study interviewed influential mothers who have the ability to spread anti-vaccine messages on social media. While most do not contribute to the anti-vaccine sentiment, understanding the motivation and practices of those that do assists the public health community in better understanding the online vaccination communication environment, leading to more effective messages to counterbalance anti-vaccine content on social media.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. How Right Now? Supporting Mental Health and Resilience Amid COVID-19
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia, Ashani Johnson-Turbes, Elizabeth W. Mitchell, Jorge M. Vallery Verlenden, Richard Puddy, Melissa C. Mercado, Pierce Nelson, Lucy Rabinowitz, Kanru Xia, Laura Wagstaff, Miao Feng, Larisa Caicedo, and Emily Tolbert
- Subjects
Gerontology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Focus group ,Mental health ,Article ,Social support ,Distress ,Health promotion ,Well-being ,Emergency Medicine ,Grief ,Psychological resilience ,Psychology ,General Nursing ,media_common - Abstract
The How Right Now communication initiative (HRN) was developed to facilitate resilience amid the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. HRN was designed as a conduit for promoting mental health and addressing feelings of grief, worry, and stress experienced during this time. This article provides an overview of the rapid, mixed-method, culturally responsive formative research process undertaken to inform the development of HRN. Specifically, it describes how HRN's disproportionately affected audiences (adults aged 65 and older and their caregivers, adults with preexisting physical and mental health conditions, adults experiencing violence, and adults experiencing economic distress) describe and discuss emotional resilience, what they need to be resilient, and what factors contribute to the perceptions of their ability to "bounce back" from the conditions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Data collection methods included an environmental scan (n >= 700 publications), social listening (n >= 1 million social media posts), partner needs-assessment calls (n = 16), partner-convened listening sessions with community members (n = 29), online focus groups (n = 58), and a national probability survey (n = 731), all in English and Spanish. Results revealed that HRN's audiences have diverse perceptions of what constitutes resilience. However, common factors were identified across populations to support resilience amid the COVID-19 pandemic, including informal and formal social support and access to services to meet basic needs, including food and housing resources. Stress, anxiety, depression, and experience with stigma and discrimination were also linked to resilience. Understanding the perspectives and experiences of disproportionately affected populations is vital to identifying supports and services, including the engagement of community stakeholders. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
- Published
- 2022
19. The Future Is Now
- Author
-
Ting Yan, Brad Edwards, and Amelia Burke‐Garcia
- Subjects
Media studies ,Twenty-First Century ,Social media ,Psychology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Culturally Appropriate Breast Cancer and Environmental Risk Messages: Targeting Racially and Ethnically Diverse Mothers
- Author
-
Michaela D Mullis, Xiaomei Cai, Carla L. Fisher, Amelia Burke-Garcia, Dasha Afanaseva, Camella J. Rising, and Kevin B. Wright
- Subjects
business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Ethnic group ,Social environment ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Race (biology) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cultural diversity ,General partnership ,Openness to experience ,Medicine ,Social media ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business - Abstract
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)-funded Breast Cancer and Environment Research Program (BCERP) provides evidence-informed educational materials targeting mothers with daughters to help them engage in lifestyle changes to reduce their environmental risk of breast cancer. Building on a partnership we developed to disseminate these materials via social media, we teamed with mommy bloggers and readers to evaluate the cultural appropriateness of the information using evidence-based practices for message design. We sought to (1) identify cross-culture factors that speak to a broad group of mothers and culture-specific factors to integrate when targeting specific cultures and (2) capture cultural challenges mothers encounter when they share the information with family to understand the social context in which they receive, interpret, and act on risk-reducing messages. We conducted 50 interviews with racially and ethnically diverse bloggers/readers and thematically analyzed transcripts, comparing findings across cultures. Across cultures, mothers identified five key factors for ensuring cultural appropriateness, but with notable cultural differences: (1) incorporate diverse images, (2) provide more information specific to environmental and cultural risk, (3) heighten the message of “it’s a family affair”, (4) make behavioral changes feasible, and (5) use less text, more visuals. Across cultures, women experienced intergenerational communication challenges with family, which were tied to (1) lack of openness, (2) relational norms, and (3) generational resistance. Findings provide message design considerations for targeting mothers broadly or based on race/ethnicity and support the notion that the larger family system should be considered when disseminating cancer risk education.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Digital Research and Data Tracking
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Social Media Marketing and Social Marketing
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. A Content Analysis of Social Support Messages about Environmental Breast Cancer Risk within Blogs for Mothers
- Author
-
Dasha Afanaseva, Amelia Burke-Garcia, Camella J. Rising, Carla L. Fisher, Kevin B. Wright, and Xiaomei Cai
- Subjects
Health (social science) ,Blogging ,Internet privacy ,Mothers ,050801 communication & media studies ,Breast Neoplasms ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,0508 media and communications ,Breast cancer ,medicine ,Humans ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,food and beverages ,Social Support ,medicine.disease ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Content analysis ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
Bloggers can help stimulate online conversations among their readers about a variety of health topics, including breast cancer. However, in previous studies, researchers have not specifically examined supportive messages within an online blogger community that stem from an intervention where bloggers were provided with evidence-based information about breast cancer risk that they could tailor and disseminate to their readers. In the current study, we content analyzed 282 supportive messages within online conversations from participants in blogger communities over a 2-month period immediately following an intervention where the authors provided 74 bloggers who write about motherhood issues with an infographic based on evidence-based information from the Breast Cancer and the Environment Research Program (BCERP) about environmental breast cancer risk/prevention. Bloggers who shared information about their personal breast cancer risk generated a significantly higher number of blog reader comments than bloggers who did not share information about their personal breast cancer risk. Bloggers who cited breast cancer statistics in posts were more likely to draw esteem and emotional support from their readers. Bloggers’ repetition of information from blog intervention messages was more likely to elicit esteem, informational, and emotional support from readers. Disclosure of a personal breast cancer diagnosis was associated with mixed types of social support messages. The theoretical and practical implications are discussed along with key limitations of the study and future directions for research in this area.
- Published
- 2020
24. Helping Mothers and Daughters Talk about Environmental Breast Cancer Risk and Risk-Reducing Lifestyle Behaviors
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia, Carla L. Fisher, Camella J. Rising, Michaela D Mullis, Kevin B. Wright, Dasha Afanaseva, and Xiaomei Cai
- Subjects
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,social media ,Mothers ,lcsh:Medicine ,Breast Neoplasms ,environmental risk ,Interpersonal communication ,Article ,Grounded theory ,Nuclear Family ,Developmental psychology ,interpersonal communication ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,breast cancer ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,Social media ,Conversation ,030212 general & internal medicine ,mother–daughter communication ,Parent-Child Relations ,Life Style ,intervention ,media_common ,Daughter ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Mother-Child Relations ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Thematic analysis ,Psychology ,lifespan - Abstract
Background: Mothers and daughters struggle to talk about breast cancer risk. Even less attention is paid to environmental determinants of cancer. Third-party online approaches can be helpful navigating these conversations. The aim of this study was to obtain feedback from mothers exposed to a social media intervention (&ldquo, mommy bloggers&rdquo, ) and identify their preferences for message-design approaches that could help them talk to their daughter(s) about environmental breast cancer risk. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 50 mothers. A thematic analysis was conducted using the constant comparative method. Results: Mothers identified four approaches to message design that could help facilitate mother&ndash, daughter communication about environmental breast cancer risk. These included two action-oriented approaches that centered on getting the conversation started and keeping the conversation going and two approaches based on lifespan factors to promote daughters&rsquo, engagement by using age-appropriate language and visuals and focusing on developmentally specific lifestyle behaviors. Mothers also provided recommended strategies within each approach. Conclusions: Mothers identified various approaches interventionists can utilize to overcome barriers to talking to daughters about environmental breast cancer risk. To promote mother&ndash, daughter communication, the messages should be action-oriented to facilitate interaction, but also developed with lifespan and developmental considerations in mind to engage daughters.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Communicating Through a Pandemic : A Chronicle of Experiences, Lessons Learned, and a Vision for the Future
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia and Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
- Communication--Social aspects, COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020---Social aspects, Communication in public health
- Abstract
Silver Award Winner from the Nonfiction Authors Association“The book is equal parts ‘how-to guide'for effective health communications and a memoir of surviving a global pandemic. I appreciated reading about Burke-Garcia's personal reflections about her experiences of isolation, uncertainty and exhaustion during quarantine. She shares her experiences and observations in a relatable and accessible manner. Knowing about the author's personal struggles made me lean into what she had to share from her professional experience leading a communications campaign. Throughout the book, she explores data and research about communication needs among people from diverse groups and presents a sensible critique of the media environment.” – Nonfiction Book AwardOutbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics are nothing new. Over the last several decades, we have been through numerous—Zika, Ebola, H1N1. The COVID‐19 pandemic, however, has challenged us like never before. During this time, we have struggled to work remotely, to balance work and children's school schedules, and to manage finances in the face of lost or furloughed jobs. We have worried about our loved ones getting sick and being able to support themselves, and we have faced the loneliness that comes with social distancing.It has affected us individually and globally—but we have not all experienced this pandemic in exactly the same way. Some communities have been hit harder in terms of sickness and death rates from COVID‐19. Many have felt the economic pressures of the pandemic more acutely. Still others have struggled disproportionately with the mental health impacts. Context has mattered in this pandemic.There is one common thread that runs through everything we have experienced though: the role that communication has played in managing this pandemic. Whether we are talking about communication about the virus and mitigation strategies, communication between friends and family, the urgent crisis resulting in mis- and dis-information, our complex and diffuse media environment, or new workplace communication strategies, communication has been front and center in this pandemic.The role of communication has been integral to the success and failure of our ability to respond and adapt to and begin to recover from this pandemic—as individuals, collectively as communities, and as countries. As a result, issues such as preparedness, misinformation, literacy and comprehension of virus and vaccine science, health equity and mental health have all gained increased awareness during this time.This book unpacks the many and varied roles that communication has played over the course of this pandemic, in order to help public health professionals, marketers and health communicators, and policymakers alike to understand what we have been through, what has worked well, and what we have struggled with. It will help us learn from our experiences, so we communicate through pandemics more successfully in the future.
- Published
- 2022
26. Perceived stress in online prostate cancer community participants: Examining relationships with stigmatization, social support network preference, and social support seeking
- Author
-
Kevin B. Wright, Amelia Burke-Garcia, Camella J. Rising, Stephen A. Rains, Nadine Bol, and Persuasive Communication (ASCoR, FMG)
- Subjects
Male ,Health (social science) ,Social stigma ,Social Stigma ,Psychological intervention ,MEDLINE ,050801 communication & media studies ,Library and Information Sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,0508 media and communications ,Help-Seeking Behavior ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,Health communication ,Internet ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Social Support ,Patient Preference ,Online community ,medicine.disease ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Psychology ,Psychosocial ,Stress, Psychological ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Men with prostate cancer often need social support to help them cope with illness-related physiological and psychosocial challenges. Whether those needs are met depends on receiving support optimally matched to their needs. This study examined relationships between perceived stress, prostate cancer-related stigma, weak-tie support preference, and online community use for social support in a survey of online prostate cancer community participants (n = 149). Findings revealed a positive relationship between stigma and perceived stress. This relationship, however, was moderated by weak-tie support preference and online community use for social support. Specifically, stigma was positively related to perceived stress when weak-tie support was preferred. Analyses also showed a positive relationship between stigma and perceived stress in those who used their online community for advice or emotional support. Health communication scholars should work collaboratively with diagnosed men, clinicians, and online community administrators to develop online interventions that optimally match social support needs.
- Published
- 2017
27. A tale of two tools: Reliability and feasibility of social media measurement tools examining e-cigarette twitter mentions
- Author
-
Cassandra A. Stanton and Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,020205 medical informatics ,business.industry ,Public health ,Internet privacy ,Exploratory research ,Data validation ,Health Informatics ,Usability ,02 engineering and technology ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Content analysis ,Political science ,Social media measurement ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Social media ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Valence (psychology) ,business - Abstract
Given 70% of Americans are seeking health information online, social media are becoming main sources of health-related information and discussions. Specifically, compounding rising trends in use of e-cigarettes in the US, there has been a rapid rise in e-cigarette marketing â much of which is happening on social media. Public health professionals seeking to understand consumer knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about e-cigarettes should consider analyzing social media data and to do so, there are numerous free and paid tools available. However, each uses different sources and processes, which makes data validation challenging. This exploratory study sought to understand the reliability and feasibility of two social media data tools analyzing e-cigarette tweets. Twitter mentions were pulled from two different industry standard tools (GNIP and Radian6) and data were evaluated on six measures, e.g. Cost, Feasibility, Ease of Use, Poster Type (individual/organization), Context (tweet content analysis), and Valence (positive/negative). Findings included similarities amongst the data sets in terms of the content themes but differences in cost and ease of use of the tools themselves. These findings align with prior research, notably that e-cigarette marketing tweets are most common and public health-related content is noticeably absent. Findings from this exploratory study can inform future social media studies as well as communication campaigns seeking to address the emerging issue of e-cigarette use. Keywords: E-cigarettes, Vaping, Twitter, Tweets, Social media
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Culturally Appropriate Breast Cancer and Environmental Risk Messages: Targeting Racially and Ethnically Diverse Mothers
- Author
-
Carla L, Fisher, Kevin B, Wright, Camella J, Rising, Michaela Devyn, Mullis, Dasha, Afanaseva, Amelia, Burke-Garcia, and Xiaomei, Cai
- Subjects
Communication ,Humans ,Mothers ,Breast Neoplasms ,Female ,Health Education ,Nuclear Family - Abstract
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)-funded Breast Cancer and Environment Research Program (BCERP) provides evidence-informed educational materials targeting mothers with daughters to help them engage in lifestyle changes to reduce their environmental risk of breast cancer. Building on a partnership we developed to disseminate these materials via social media, we teamed with mommy bloggers and readers to evaluate the cultural appropriateness of the information using evidence-based practices for message design. We sought to (1) identify cross-culture factors that speak to a broad group of mothers and culture-specific factors to integrate when targeting specific cultures and (2) capture cultural challenges mothers encounter when they share the information with family to understand the social context in which they receive, interpret, and act on risk-reducing messages. We conducted 50 interviews with racially and ethnically diverse bloggers/readers and thematically analyzed transcripts, comparing findings across cultures. Across cultures, mothers identified five key factors for ensuring cultural appropriateness, but with notable cultural differences: (1) incorporate diverse images, (2) provide more information specific to environmental and cultural risk, (3) heighten the message of "it's a family affair", (4) make behavioral changes feasible, and (5) use less text, more visuals. Across cultures, women experienced intergenerational communication challenges with family, which were tied to (1) lack of openness, (2) relational norms, and (3) generational resistance. Findings provide message design considerations for targeting mothers broadly or based on race/ethnicity and support the notion that the larger family system should be considered when disseminating cancer risk education.
- Published
- 2019
29. Understanding the Relationship between Influencers and Their Followers
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
Advertising ,Psychology ,Influencer marketing - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Influencing Health
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Importance of Great—Not Good—Creative
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Perceptions of Risk
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
Perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychology ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Conclusion
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Influencers and Health
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
Advertising ,Influencer marketing - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Influencers: Old and New
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
Influencer marketing - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. It Is Just the Great Unknown—Or Is It?
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Introduction
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Metadata Correction: Partnering With Mommy Bloggers to Disseminate Breast Cancer Risk Information: Social Media Intervention (Preprint)
- Author
-
Kevin Wright, Carla Fisher, Camella Rising, Amelia Burke-Garcia, Dasha Afanaseva, and Xiaomei Cai
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Influencing Health : A Comprehensive Guide to Working with Online Influencers
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia and Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
- Leadership, Health promotion--Philosophy, Health promotion
- Abstract
The U.S., and countries around the globe, are facing an ever-evolving series of health issues, including obesity, food deserts, child hunger, poor maternal health outcomes, and the resurgence of communicable diseases. Traditionally, health communicators and marketers have talked about these issues in a vacuum, in which related information is only visible when people are specifically seeking it out. If we are to give global health the attention it deserves, we need to weave it into our everyday conversations and experiences. Ultimately, we need to normalize the conversation around health. The emergence of everyday online opinion leaders has created a whole new market for shifting consumer perceptions and behaviors. In fact, many of these everyday online opinion leaders, called influencers, have built such large-scale social media presences that they now have the voice, the platform, and the following to reach millions of people with personal points of view on any number of topics. There are great opportunities for engaging with online influencers to support health promotion programs. However, navigating this online community is new to many people. Understanding how this online community works, the opportunities for paid and unpaid engagements, and the value that health programs specifically have with this community, is paramount to successfully working with influencers. This book draws from research with over 400 online influencers, the latest industry data, and practical, real-world experiences working with influencers over the past ten years. An easy-to-read guidebook for marketers and health communicators alike, this book leverages storytelling as a means for sharing lessons-learned and providing readers with practical knowledge about the online marketing industry and influencer community, as they relate to health.
- Published
- 2020
40. Partnering With Mommy Bloggers to Disseminate Breast Cancer Risk Information: Social Media Intervention (Preprint)
- Author
-
Kevin Wright, Carla Fisher, Camella Rising, Amelia Burke-Garcia, Dasha Afanaseva, and Xiaomei Cai
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Women are concerned about reducing their breast cancer risk, particularly if they have daughters. Social media platforms, such as blogs written by mothers, are increasingly being recognized as a channel that women use to make personal and family health–related decisions. Government initiatives (eg, Interagency Breast Cancer and Environmental Research Coordinating Committee) and researchers have called for scientists and the community to partner and disseminate scientifically and community-informed environmental risk information. OBJECTIVE We developed and evaluated a blog intervention to disseminate breast cancer and environmental risk information to mothers. We teamed with mommy bloggers to disseminate a message that we developed and tailored for mothers and daughters based on scientific evidence from the Breast Cancer and the Environment Research Program (BCERP). We posited that the intervention would influence women’s exposure to, acceptance of, and beliefs about environmental risks while promoting their intention to adopt risk-reducing behaviors. METHODS Using a quasi-experimental design, we recruited 75 mommy bloggers to disseminate the breast cancer risk message on their respective blogs and examined the impact of the intervention on (1) readers exposed to the intervention (n=445) and (2) readers not exposed to the intervention (comparison group; n=353). RESULTS Following the intervention, blog reader scores indicating exposure to the breast cancer risk and prevention information were greater than scores of blog readers who were not exposed (or did not recall seeing the message; mean 3.92, SD 0.85 and mean 3.45, SD 0.92, respectively; P CONCLUSIONS Results indicated that blog readers who were exposed to (and specifically recalled) the BCERP-adapted intervention messages from mommy bloggers had higher breast cancer risk and prevention information exposure scores and higher breast cancer risk and prevention information satisfaction and influence scores than those who did not see (or recall) them. Mommy bloggers may be important opinion leaders for some women and key to enhancing the messaging, delivery, and impact of environmental breast cancer risk information on mothers.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Use of Digital Communication Channels to Enhance Environmental Health Literacy
- Author
-
Kevin B. Wright, Amelia Burke-Garcia, and Gary L. Kreps
- Subjects
Interactivity ,Health information technology ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,eHealth ,Information technology ,business ,Digital divide ,Health informatics ,Dissemination ,mHealth - Abstract
There is tremendous potential to utilize new and emerging digital channels of communication to help raise public environmental health literacy. Modern society is in the midst of a communication revolution that is rapidly expanding public use of digital communication systems and tools for many goals and purposes. Yet, there is a plethora of complex, and sometimes contradictory, information concerning environmental health risks that consumers struggle to understand. Consumers additionally struggle with determining what are the most important environmental health risks to be aware of concerning health issues such as cancers and heart disease, and what can be done to avoid these health risks? This chapter examines the growth and influence of digital communication as channels for helping consumers access, evaluate, and utilize relevant health information concerning environmental health risks. Different digital communication channels and platforms are identified as potentially strong venues for disseminating important environmental health information. Guidelines for designing and implementing environmental health education messages are examined to promote the most effective use of digital communication channels to reach and influence intended audiences. Strategic design principles, such as enhancing system interactivity, interoperability, ease of use, immediacy, adaptability, accessibility, and cultural sensitivity are examined and applied to the dissemination of environmental health information. Strategies for working in close collaboration with representatives from key populations to promote user-centered design of health information systems is highlighted. Relevant theory and research concerning the applications of digital information technologies for health information dissemination are reviewed and applied to promoting environmental health literacy.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Facebook as a tool for respondent tracing
- Author
-
Sid J. Schneider, Gail Thomas, and Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
Trace (semiology) ,Foster care ,business.industry ,Cyberpsychology ,Intervention (counseling) ,Respondent ,Confidentiality ,Non-response bias ,Tracing ,Public relations ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
In longitudinal research projects, respondents’ contact information such as address, telephone, and email can become out-of-date. Some researchers have searched Facebook for these unreachable respondents, with the hope of sending them a private message that asks them to provide the needed follow-up data. Published reports of research that used Facebook that way raise several questions: When should researchers conclude that a Facebook user is actually the respondent they are seeking? How should researchers word their message? To what extent is respondent tracing through Facebook likely to reduce nonresponse bias? Is communication using Facebook sufficiently confidential? This paper discusses these questions and presents Westat’s own use of Facebook to trace respondents in a longitudinal evaluation of an intervention for youth in foster care. The paper discusses the implications of ourwork for future research practice.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Perceptions About Disseminating Health Information Among Mommy Bloggers: Quantitative Study (Preprint)
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia, Gary L Kreps, and Kevin B Wright
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Social media are potentially powerful channels for communicating relevant health information in culturally sensitive and influential ways to key audiences. Moreover, these channels hold promise for promoting awareness and knowledge of health risks, prevention, and treatment by utilizing opinion leaders for message dissemination. Despite limited empirical evidence to-date, early promising results suggest that blogs are a form of social media that should be examined as worthy channels for health communication. OBJECTIVES This formative study explored mommy bloggers’ perceptions about sharing health-related information on their blogs with their readers. It also sought to analyze which topics would be of most interest to mommy bloggers, what motivates them to write about health issues, and how they perceive interest in these topics among their readers. METHODS This study employed survey methodology, including the use of open-ended questions, the responses to which were coded for analysis. Specifically, a 14-item survey was fielded with mommy bloggers between October 1 and October 28, 2016. Bloggers were recruited through The Motherhood network. A total of 461 mommy bloggers responded to the survey; 163 were removed for low quality responses and incomplete data. As a result, 298 eligible participants completed the survey. For open-ended questions in the survey, a sample of responses were coded and analyzed. RESULTS The majority of the respondents (87.2%, 260/298) reported that they have written about health issues in the past; 97.3% (290/298) of the respondents reported that they would consider writing about health issues sometime in the future, and 96.3% (287/298) of the respondents reported that their readers like to read about health issues on their blogs. In terms of content priorities for this sample of bloggers, Nutrition and Physical Activity dominate the current conversation and similarly, Physical Activity and Nutrition remain top content priorities for these bloggers for the future. Moreover, 21.3% of the respondents reported that their readers would be interested in these topics. Finally, having a personal connection with a health issue was found to be positively associated with likeliness to write about health issues on their blog (P CONCLUSIONS This study illustrates that there are potentially rich opportunities for working with mommy bloggers to communicate with key health decision makers (moms) on important health issues. There is a great support among mommy bloggers for health information dissemination as well as interest for accessing relevant health information from their readers. This presents an opportunity for public health research and communication campaigns to more broadly promote their messages, thereby contributing to their behavior change objectives. Limitations included overrepresentation of white, higher-educated, and younger women. It suggests a need for more targeted engagement of a diverse sample for future work.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Power & Perspective of Mommy Bloggers: Formative Research with Social Media Opinion Leaders about HPV Vaccination
- Author
-
Kevin B. Wright, Corinne N. Berry, Gary L. Kreps, and Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
030505 public health ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,Opinion leadership ,Hpv vaccination ,Advertising ,Public relations ,Power (social and political) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social media ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sociology ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Formative research - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Leveraging social and digital media for participant recruitment: A review of methods from the Bayley Short Form Formative Study
- Author
-
Amelia Burke-Garcia and Sunitha Mathew
- Subjects
Medical education ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,Brief Report ,social media ,030231 tropical medicine ,Research Methods and Technology ,Bayley ,General Medicine ,Research opportunities ,computer.software_genre ,Child development ,Digital media ,Formative assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social media ,recruitment ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Toddler ,business ,Psychology ,computer - Abstract
IntroductionSocial media is increasingly being used in research, including recruitment.MethodsFor the Bayley Short Form Formative Study, which was conducted under the the National Children’s Study, traditional methods of recruitment proved to be ineffective. Therefore, digital media were identified as potential channels for recruitment.ResultsResults included successful recruitment of over 1800 infant and toddler participants to the Study.ConclusionsThis paper outlines the methods, results, and future research opportunities.
- Published
- 2016
46. Perceptions About Disseminating Health Information Among Mommy Bloggers: Quantitative Study
- Author
-
Kevin B. Wright, Amelia Burke-Garcia, and Gary L. Kreps
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,health messages ,social media ,media_common.quotation_subject ,050801 communication & media studies ,Formative assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Survey methodology ,0302 clinical medicine ,0508 media and communications ,medicine ,Social media ,Conversation ,030212 general & internal medicine ,health information dissemination ,Health communication ,media_common ,Original Paper ,mommy bloggers ,business.industry ,Public health ,05 social sciences ,Behavior change ,Opinion leadership ,General Medicine ,Public relations ,business ,Psychology - Abstract
Background: Social media are potentially powerful channels for communicating relevant health information in culturally sensitive and influential ways to key audiences. Moreover, these channels hold promise for promoting awareness and knowledge of health risks, prevention, and treatment by utilizing opinion leaders for message dissemination. Despite limited empirical evidence to-date, early promising results suggest that blogs are a form of social media that should be examined as worthy channels for health communication. Objectives: This formative study explored mommy bloggers’ perceptions about sharing health-related information on their blogs with their readers. It also sought to analyze which topics would be of most interest to mommy bloggers, what motivates them to write about health issues, and how they perceive interest in these topics among their readers. Methods: This study employed survey methodology, including the use of open-ended questions, the responses to which were coded for analysis. Specifically, a 14-item survey was fielded with mommy bloggers between October 1 and October 28, 2016. Bloggers were recruited through The Motherhood network. A total of 461 mommy bloggers responded to the survey; 163 were removed for low quality responses and incomplete data. As a result, 298 eligible participants completed the survey. For open-ended questions in the survey, a sample of responses were coded and analyzed. Results: The majority of the respondents (87.2%, 260/298) reported that they have written about health issues in the past; 97.3% (290/298) of the respondents reported that they would consider writing about health issues sometime in the future, and 96.3% (287/298) of the respondents reported that their readers like to read about health issues on their blogs. In terms of content priorities for this sample of bloggers, Nutrition and Physical Activity dominate the current conversation and similarly, Physical Activity and Nutrition remain top content priorities for these bloggers for the future. Moreover, 21.3% of the respondents reported that their readers would be interested in these topics. Finally, having a personal connection with a health issue was found to be positively associated with likeliness to write about health issues on their blog (P
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Trending now: future directions in digital media for the public health sector
- Author
-
Gabriel Scally and Amelia Burke-Garcia
- Subjects
Strategic planning ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Internet ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,Media relations ,Public relations ,Digital media ,Intervention (law) ,Mobile media ,Political science ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Social media ,Public Health ,Healthcare Disparities ,business ,Health Education ,Social Media - Abstract
© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Faculty of Public Health. Background Digital media usage is expanding enormously and is starting to be used as a public health intervention and communication tool. It has an ability to increase the reach of public health research and communication, as well as drive measurable behaviour change. But there is an absence of both deep and wide understanding of the opportunities within digital media, i.e. most people think only of Facebook and Twitter when they think of social media; smart, strategic planning for its widespread use is not common practice and rigorous evaluative studies of its effectiveness are few and far between. Methods This paper analyses the published literature on this topic and identifies the top 10 directions that use of digital media is likely to take in the medium term. Results The analysis strongly supports the position that digital media needs to be taken seriously as a vehicle for public health activity in its own right and not merely as an adjunct to other campaigns. Conclusions Digital media will continue to develop and move from being an add-on to existing activity to being the major vehicle for significant elements of research, data collection and advocacy. It is important that public health leaders fully understand and engage in its development and use.
- Published
- 2014
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.