Evaluation of the 'A walk can work wonders' mass media campaign in South Australia.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health Promotion Journal of Australia Pub Date : 2024-10-03 DOI:10.1002/hpja.923
Adrian Bauman, Natasha Schranz, William Bellew, Gabrielle Fisher, Benjamin Krumeich, Alyson J Crozier
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Abstract

Issue addressed: Few population-wide efforts have targeted physical activity in Australia. Mass media campaigns are used to promote physical activity and walking, and World Health Organisation recommends their linkage to broader cross-government initiatives. This project evaluates a South Australian (SA) walking mass media campaign linked to the overall SA Walking Strategy.

Methods: Between January and June 2022, Wellbeing SA (a SA government agency) conducted two waves of a mass media campaign, 'A walk can work wonders', to promote walking. The campaign was part of the SA Walking Strategy, targeting the goal to change the 'community culture towards recognising walking' as convenient, affordable and health-promoting. Evaluation was formative (pre-campaign), process (campaign implementation and delivery) and impact. Formative evaluation comprised concept and tagline testing with adult SAs to develop the campaign messages and theme. Process evaluation was comprised of media monitoring of social media, mainstream media and other media monitoring metrics. The process evaluation was dominated by social media marketing in Wave 1, with substantially more paid TV media and radio in Wave 2. The impact evaluation comprised two independent sample surveys of adult SAs (n = 800 each) following each wave of the campaign. Measures included generic and prompted campaign recall and attitudes to physical activity. An independent South Australian Population Health Survey (SAPHS) tracked walking and physical activity behaviours from 2021 to the end of 2022.

Results: Process evaluation showed intensive social media usage in Wave 1, and through increased paid television and radio in Wave 2. Generic recall of any walking message (23.9%) and prompted recall of the specific campaign message (27.8%) reached most socio-demographic groups, especially those with chronic health problems. Increases in intention to increase activity and increased self-reported activity were seen between the campaign Wave 1 and Wave 2 notable as the Wave 2 increase followed substantial television advertising. The SAPHS data showed increased population walking following the campaign waves, compared to the same period in 2021.

Conclusions: Detailed and structured evaluation of a comprehensive mass media campaign showed good reach, and population changes in intentions and walking behaviour amongst SAs. SO WHAT?: It is likely that comprehensive approaches are needed to support mass media campaigns and amplify their effects. Serial, sustained campaigns are needed to monitor ongoing effects.

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对南澳大利亚州 "散步能创造奇迹 "大众传媒活动的评估。
解决的问题:在澳大利亚,针对全民体育活动的努力很少。世界卫生组织建议将大众媒体运动与更广泛的跨政府倡议联系起来,以促进体育锻炼和步行。本项目评估了与南澳大利亚州总体步行战略相关联的南澳大利亚州(SA)步行大众媒体活动:2022 年 1 月至 6 月期间,南澳大利亚州(Wellbeing SA,南澳大利亚州政府机构)开展了两轮名为 "步行能创造奇迹 "的大众媒体活动,以推广步行。该活动是南澳大利亚步行战略的一部分,目标是改变 "社区文化,让人们认识到步行 "是一种方便、实惠和促进健康的方式。评估包括形成性评估(活动前)、过程评估(活动实施和交付)和影响评估。形成性评估包括与成人 SA 一起进行概念和标语测试,以制定活动信息和主题。过程评估包括对社交媒体、主流媒体和其他媒体监测指标的媒体监测。第一波的过程评估以社交媒体营销为主,第二波的付费电视媒体和广播媒体大幅增加。影响评估包括在每波活动后对成年 SA 进行的两次独立抽样调查(每次 n = 800)。调查内容包括运动的一般回忆和提示回忆,以及对体育锻炼的态度。一项独立的南澳大利亚人口健康调查(SAPHS)追踪了从 2021 年到 2022 年底的步行和体育锻炼行为:过程评估显示,在第一波活动中,社交媒体得到了广泛使用,而在第二波活动中,付费电视和广播的使用量有所增加。大多数社会人口群体,尤其是有慢性健康问题的群体,对任何步行信息的一般回忆率(23.9%)和对特定运动信息的提示回忆率(27.8%)都达到了要求。在活动第一波和第二波之间,增加活动量的意向和自我报告的活动量都有增加,这一点很明显,因为第二波的活动量是在大量电视广告之后增加的。SAPHS 的数据显示,与 2021 年同期相比,在运动浪潮之后,步行人口有所增加:对一项综合性大众媒体活动进行的详细而有序的评估表明,该活动的覆盖范围很广,并且改变了南澳大利亚人的意向和步行行为。所以呢?需要开展连续、持续的宣传活动,以监测持续效果。
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来源期刊
Health Promotion Journal of Australia
Health Promotion Journal of Australia PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
10.50%
发文量
115
期刊介绍: The purpose of the Health Promotion Journal of Australia is to facilitate communication between researchers, practitioners, and policymakers involved in health promotion activities. Preference for publication is given to practical examples of policies, theories, strategies and programs which utilise educational, organisational, economic and/or environmental approaches to health promotion. The journal also publishes brief reports discussing programs, professional viewpoints, and guidelines for practice or evaluation methodology. The journal features articles, brief reports, editorials, perspectives, "of interest", viewpoints, book reviews and letters.
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