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A Meta-analysis of the effect of medicated health communication campaigns Trent C. Joseph PCH 586.

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Presentation on theme: "A Meta-analysis of the effect of medicated health communication campaigns Trent C. Joseph PCH 586."— Presentation transcript:

1 a Meta-analysis of the effect of medicated health communication campaigns
Trent C. Joseph PCH 586

2 What is Meta-analysis? -Statistical procedure for combining data from independent studies. -Used to determine the effectiveness of a study by using a common measure called effect size. -Successful meta-analysis can be used to identify the reason for the variation of effect.

3 BIOSTAT 101: Effect Size Effect size is a simple way of quantifying the difference between two groups. *valuable for quantifying effectiveness of a particular intervention “Does it work or not?” vs. “How well does it work in a range of contexts?” Important tool for reporting and interpreting effectiveness than statistical significance (p-value).

4 The Current Study -Snyder et al. (2004) performed a meta-analysis of studies of mediated health campaigns in the United States. Purpose: To estimate the average effects of medicated health campaigns for different health topics and types of behavior. Research Questions: 1. What is the average effect size for different campaign topics? 2. Which function best describes the impact of baseline behavior rates on campaign effect size?

5 variables Independent Variable(s): Campaign Topic Type of Behavior Adoption Type Addictiveness of Behavior Baseline Behavior Rate Dependent Variable(s): Effect on behavior change

6 Hypotheses 1. Campaigns promoting the commencement of a new behavior will have a greater average effect size than campaigns promoting the prevention of an undesirable behavior, which in turn, will have a greater average effect size than campaigns promoting the cessation of an existing undesirable behavior. 2. Campaigns that promote the cessation of addictive behaviors will have a smaller effect size than those promoting the cessation of non-addictive behaviors.

7 Campaign Topic/Behavior
The broad categories of campaign topics included: Smoking Drinking Seat-belt use Cardiovascular (diet and exercise) Mammography Dental care Sexual behavior Unfortunately, it is not feasible to meta-analyze the effects of mediated campaigns on most specific behaviors because there are few studies conducted on those specific behaviors.

8 Adoption Type The “goal of the campaign”
However, it may be difficult to categorize that “goal” to only prevent a behavior without necessarily promoting a new behavior. A promising distinction is to differentiate between: The commencement or a new behavior The prevention of an undesirable new behavior The cessation/reduction of an old behavior

9 What adoption type do these campaigns have?
UK Campaign: Embrace Life Campaign: Strong4Life Campaign:

10 Addictive Behavior Is the behavior addictive or not?
Campaigns should seek to alter an individual’s intentions and attitudes towards the behavior Addiction increases resistance to campaign messages There are often physiological barriers to changing an addictive behavior

11 Baseline Behavior rate
-The pretest percentage of the desired behavior in the invention community. Diffusion Theory: the percentage of the population that adopts to a new behavior and follows a predictable pattern over time. Bandwagon effect: positive impact on baseline behavior rate. The more people who engage in the behavior the more correct the behavior appears to be. “Resistance effect”

12 Measures To compute the effect size for each campaign researchers converted the published statistic into a correlation (r) using standard deviation formulas. The correlation was then converted from r to d with the DSTAT. To calculate the d-statistic researchers used the following formula: Cohen’s D

13 Key Findings Cohen's d Interpretation 0.2 Small 0.5 meduim 0.8 Large
The average media campaign effect on behavior was r=.09. Cohen's d Interpretation 0.2 Small 0.5 meduim 0.8 Large

14 Findings Cont’D Half (48) of the campaigns promoted the adoption of a new behavior and were more successful than prevention and cessation campaigns (r=.12). Smoking was the only addictive behavior represented in the campaigns making the test of H1 weak. Behavior rate results were inconclusive.

15 Recommendations Campaign planners should set modest goals for campaigns and be sure to use large sample sizes to detect effect size. It would also help to consider the type of behavior being promoted (CCP) and whether or not the campaign behavior is addictive. To effectively test campaign effect size researchers' should design a field experiment to directly test novel campaign designs.

16 It is essential to understand the key characteristics of campaigns that moderate effect size and it is critical to remember that small percentages may affect very large numbers of people. For new campaign topics, it is important to know whether or not there will be enforcement messages since they have greater success rates. Lastly, media campaigns may be more cost-effective when compared to clinical-based education

17 References Comprehensive meta-analysis. (2006). Retrieved from analysis.com/pages/why_do.html Communicate and Collaborate. (2009).


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