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Journal Article

Citation

Wallack L, Dorfman L. Health Educ. Q. 1996; 23(3): 293-317.

Affiliation

University of California, Berkeley, USA. lwallack@uclink4.berkeley.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 1996, Society for Public Health Education, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8841816

Abstract

The purpose of media advocacy is to promote public health goals by using the media to strategically apply pressure for policy change. It provides a framework for moving the public health discussion from a primary focus on the health behavior of individuals to the behavior of the policymakers whose decisions structure the environment in which people act. It addresses the power gap rather than just the information gap. Media advocacy focuses on public policy rather than personal behavior. This article uses two case studies to illustrate key aspects of media advocacy. The first is a 5-year statewide violence prevention initiative for young people in California. The second focuses on the activities of a mothers' group working to improve public housing. The "new public health," with its focus on participation, policy development, and political processes, could benefit from incorporating media advocacy.


Language: en

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