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Journal Article

Citation

Bomlitz LJ, Brezis M. J. Public Health (Oxford) 2008; 30(2): 202-204.

Affiliation

Braun School of Public Health and Center for Clinical Quality and Safety, Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical Center, POB 12000, Jerusalem 91120, Israel.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/pubmed/fdn009

PMID

18281322

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mass media are a leading source of health information for general public. We wished to examine the relationship between the intensity of media coverage for selected health topics and their actual risk to public health. METHODS: Mass media reports in the United States on emerging and chronic health hazards (severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), bioterrorism, West Nile Fever, AIDS, smoking and physical inactivity) were counted for the year 2003, using LexisNexis database. The number of media reports for each health risk was correlated with the corresponding death rate as reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. RESULTS: The number of media reports inversely correlated with the actual number of deaths for the health risks evaluated. SARS and bioterrorism killed less than a dozen people in 2003, but together generated over 100 000 media reports, far more than those covering smoking and physical inactivity, which killed nearly a million Americans. CONCLUSIONS: Emerging health hazards are over-reported in mass media by comparison to common threats to public health. Since premature mortality in industrialized societies is most often due to well-known risks such as smoking and physical inactivity, their under-representation on public agendas may cause suboptimal prioritization of public health resources.


Language: en

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