消费者感知的 COVID-19 广告价值对健康保护行为的影响:参与的中介作用。

Q3 Health Professions Health Marketing Quarterly Pub Date : 2024-06-04 DOI:10.1080/07359683.2024.2355378
Mir Abdur Rafeh, Amir Zaib Abbasi, Linda D Hollebeek, Muhammad Asghar Ali, Ding Hooi Ting
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管大流行病已经过去,但基于社交媒体的信息仍在展示与 COVID-19 相关的线索(例如,佩戴口罩以保持安全),继续促进消费者的健康保护行为。然而,目前仍不清楚社交媒体传播(如广告)是如何影响这种行为的,这暴露了一个重要的文献空白。为了填补这一空白,我们采用了 Ducoffe 的广告价值模型来研究与大流行病相关的广告(如那些敦促消费者保持安全的广告,包括大流行病后的广告)如何影响消费者的健康保护行为。我们还研究了消费者参与(CE)如何调节这些关联。为了探讨这些问题,我们收集了 301 位 Z 世代消费者的样本数据,并使用偏最小二乘法结构方程模型(PLS-SEM)进行了分析。我们发现,信息性广告、可信广告、刺激性广告和侵扰性广告会提高消费者的参与度和健康保护行为。我们还发现,参与度会加强这些关联,从而揭示其战略价值。最后,我们概述了我们的分析所产生的重要理论和实践意义。
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The effect of consumer-perceived COVID-19 ad value on health-protective behavior: Mediating role of engagement.

Though the pandemic has passed, social media-based messaging continues to exhibit COVID-19-related cues (e.g., wearing a face mask to stay safe), continuing to foster consumers' health-protective behavior. However, it remains unclear how social media communications (e.g., advertising) affect such behavior, exposing an important literature-based gap. Addressing this gap, we deploy Ducoffe's advertising value model to examine how pandemic-related advertisements (e.g., those urging consumers to stay safe, including post-the pandemic) impact their health-protective behavior. We also examine how consumer engagement (CE) mediates these associations. To explore these issues, we collected data from a sample of 301 Gen Z consumers, which was analyzed using partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM). We find that informative, credible, irritating, and obtrusive ads raise consumer engagement and health-protective behavior. Engagement was also found to strengthen these associations, revealing their strategic value. We conclude by outlining important theoretical and practical implications that arise from our analyses.

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来源期刊
Health Marketing Quarterly
Health Marketing Quarterly Health Professions-Health Professions (all)
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: Health Marketing Quarterly is directed at academicians and practitioners who are concerned with the concepts, practice, and research of health care marketing in today"s complex environment. The journal addresses important contemporary issues in the use of marketing by health care organizations like hospitals, individual practitioners, and public health care organizations. This includes the use of marketing to promote, position, deter, enhance health care organizations/issues, and the development of the marketing literature on both a conceptual and empirical basis.
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