Sweet Lies! Lessons Learned from Hawai'i's Sweetened Fruit Drink Countermarketing Campaign.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q1 COMMUNICATION
Journal of Health Communication Pub Date : 2025-03-28 Epub Date: 2025-03-31 DOI:10.1080/10810730.2025.2461588
Meghan D McGurk, Gail Ogawa, Katherine Inoue, Colin Wills, Lance K Ching, Alena K Shalaby, Naomee Kong, Heidi Hansen Smith, Jessica Lee, Lola Irvin, L Brooke Keliikoa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Beverage industry marketing tactics can cause caregivers to misperceive sweetened fruit drinks (SFDs) as healthy, increasing the likelihood they give their children SFDs. The Sweet Lies! countermarketing campaign sought to educate Hawai'i caregivers of children ages 0-8 about the industry's misleading tactics and the harms of SFDs. Focus groups were held to develop messages for Hawai'i caregivers. The campaign ran January-April 2023 on television, digital and social media, radio, and in malls. Campaign effects were assessed with media metrics and pre-/post-campaign cross-sectional surveys. Pre-surveys were conducted November-December 2022 (n = 458) and post-surveys were conducted in May 2023 (n = 482) to evaluate campaign effects on caregivers' perceptions of SFD health risks and SFD purchases in a simulated store. Pre-/post-survey samples were demographically different precluding comparisons and post-survey data were unable to show differences in health risk ratings and SFD purchases by exposure. The campaign produced 32,155,747 impressions across media outlets. Post-survey data showed campaign recall of 36.9% and informed campaign revisions. Lessons learned, including the importance of formative research for campaign tailoring and evaluation for real-world campaign implementation, the value of panel surveys for rapid evaluations, and to plan for low exposure rates, are shared to inform other campaign and evaluation efforts.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
4.50%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Journal of Health Communication: International Perspectives is the leading journal covering the full breadth of a field that focuses on the communication of health information globally. Articles feature research on: • Developments in the field of health communication; • New media, m-health and interactive health communication; • Health Literacy; • Social marketing; • Global Health; • Shared decision making and ethics; • Interpersonal and mass media communication; • Advances in health diplomacy, psychology, government, policy and education; • Government, civil society and multi-stakeholder initiatives; • Public Private partnerships and • Public Health campaigns. Global in scope, the journal seeks to advance a synergistic relationship between research and practical information. With a focus on promoting the health literacy of the individual, caregiver, provider, community, and those in the health policy, the journal presents research, progress in areas of technology and public health, ethics, politics and policy, and the application of health communication principles. The journal is selective with the highest quality social scientific research including qualitative and quantitative studies.
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