Unintended effects of health advertising to women

Issue addressed: The images and values used by health advertising may produce counter outcomes to those intended. Methods: Three age cohorts (11-12, 14-15 and 18-25 years old) of girls and young women, sampled from low, medium and high socio-economic status backgrounds, were asked about the content...

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Main Authors: Shoebridge, Andrea, O'Ferrall, I., Howat, Peter, Mitchell, Helen
Format: Journal Article
Published: Australian Health Promotion Association 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15772
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author Shoebridge, Andrea
O'Ferrall, I.
Howat, Peter
Mitchell, Helen
author_facet Shoebridge, Andrea
O'Ferrall, I.
Howat, Peter
Mitchell, Helen
author_sort Shoebridge, Andrea
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Issue addressed: The images and values used by health advertising may produce counter outcomes to those intended. Methods: Three age cohorts (11-12, 14-15 and 18-25 years old) of girls and young women, sampled from low, medium and high socio-economic status backgrounds, were asked about the content of televised commercial and public health advertising to women. Transcripts of group discussions and follow-up interviews were thematically analysed. Results: Clear age-related cognitive and attitudinal differences, grouped into values and audience segmentation fit, were found. However, poor self-comparisons with advertising models, failure to identify with content, and adoption of dominant health values were common to all. The use of high-value visual imagery was paradoxically supported and rejected as were the overt health messages in the advertising. Conclusions: There is a wide range of responses to health advertising material related to social contexts and diverse experience. Some of these responses may bring unintended effects for individuals in both target and general audiences.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-157722017-01-30T11:51:50Z Unintended effects of health advertising to women Shoebridge, Andrea O'Ferrall, I. Howat, Peter Mitchell, Helen values effects Advertising women Issue addressed: The images and values used by health advertising may produce counter outcomes to those intended. Methods: Three age cohorts (11-12, 14-15 and 18-25 years old) of girls and young women, sampled from low, medium and high socio-economic status backgrounds, were asked about the content of televised commercial and public health advertising to women. Transcripts of group discussions and follow-up interviews were thematically analysed. Results: Clear age-related cognitive and attitudinal differences, grouped into values and audience segmentation fit, were found. However, poor self-comparisons with advertising models, failure to identify with content, and adoption of dominant health values were common to all. The use of high-value visual imagery was paradoxically supported and rejected as were the overt health messages in the advertising. Conclusions: There is a wide range of responses to health advertising material related to social contexts and diverse experience. Some of these responses may bring unintended effects for individuals in both target and general audiences. 2003 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15772 Australian Health Promotion Association restricted
spellingShingle values
effects
Advertising
women
Shoebridge, Andrea
O'Ferrall, I.
Howat, Peter
Mitchell, Helen
Unintended effects of health advertising to women
title Unintended effects of health advertising to women
title_full Unintended effects of health advertising to women
title_fullStr Unintended effects of health advertising to women
title_full_unstemmed Unintended effects of health advertising to women
title_short Unintended effects of health advertising to women
title_sort unintended effects of health advertising to women
topic values
effects
Advertising
women
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15772