Black newspapers as a tool for cancer education in African American communities

Charlene A Caburnay, Matthew W Kreuter, Glen Cameron, Douglas A Luke, Elisia L Cohen, Lillie McDaniels, Monica Wohlberg, Paul Atkins, Charlene A Caburnay, Matthew W Kreuter, Glen Cameron, Douglas A Luke, Elisia L Cohen, Lillie McDaniels, Monica Wohlberg, Paul Atkins

Abstract

Background: Despite the long history, wide reach and unique influence of Black newspapers in many African American communities, no national studies have examined how these newspapers cover health and cancer issues, or reader perceptions of their coverage.

Design and participants: A two-year national sample of Black newspapers (n=24) and community-matched general audience newspapers (n=12) was reviewed, and 8,690 health and cancer stories were identified and content analyzed. A survey of 783 Black newspaper readers in the same 24 communities assessed reading frequency and perceptions of reporting for both types of newspapers, as well as readers' health concerns and cancer screening behaviors.

Results: As a proportion of total health coverage, Black newspapers published more cancer stories than general audience newspapers, and their stories were more likely to contain localized information, address disparities, focus on prevention, include calls to action for readers and refer readers to cancer information resources (all P<.001). Black newspaper readers identified cancer as the health issue that concerned them most, yet rated it the fourth most important health problem affecting African Americans.

Conclusions: Black newspapers hold promise for helping to eliminate cancer disparities by increasing cancer awareness, prevention, and screening among African Americans.

References

    1. American Cancer Society. Cancer facts & figures for African Americans 2007–2008. Atlanta, GA: American Cancer Society; 2007.
    1. Wolseley R. The Black press, U.S.A. Ames, IA: The Iowa State University Press; 1972.
    1. Pride A, Wilson C. A history of the Black press. Washington, DC: Howard University Press; 1997.
    1. Cornish S, Russwurm J. To our patrons. Freedom's Journal. 1827 Mar 16;
    1. Jones-Webb R, Baranowski S, Ran D, Finnegan J, Wagenaar A. Content analysis of coverage of alcohol control policy issues in Black-oriented and mainstream newspapers in the U.S. Journal of Public Health Policy. 1997;18(1):49–66.
    1. Domke D. The black press in the "Nadir" of African Americans. Journalism History. 1994 Autumn-Winter;20(3):131–138.
    1. Brodie M, Kjellson N, Hoff T, Parker M. Perceptions of Latinos, African Americans, and Whites on media as a health information source. The Howard Journal of Communications. 1999;10(3):147–167.
    1. Oliver P, Maney G. Political processes and local newspaper coverage of protest events: From selection bias to triadic interactions. The American Journal of Sociology. 2000;106(2):463–503.
    1. Wolseley R. The Black press, U.S.A. 2nd ed. Ames, Iowa: Iowa University Press; 1990.
    1. Gregory D. All the black news that's fit to print. Essence. 1998;29:86.
    1. Brown W. The social impact of the Black press. New York: Carlton Press Corp; 1994.
    1. Sylvester J. Media research bureau Black newspaper readership report. In: Black F, editor. Milestones in Black Newspaper Research. Washington, DC: National Newspaper Publishers Association; 1993. pp. 11–13.pp. 56–81.
    1. Muhammad L. The Black press: Past and present. Nieman Reports. 2003 Fall;57(3):13–16.
    1. National Newspaper Publishers Association. NNPA media services. [Accessed January 28, 2008]; .
    1. Hatcher J. Passion for the 'minor leagues': Nurturing devotion in an increasingly corporate community press. Columbia Journalism Review. 2003 May-Jun
    1. Davis N. Ring around the metros. Presstime. 1999 Sep
    1. Thomasch P. Small towns are bright spots for US newspapers. Reuters. 2006 Jun 12;
    1. Sheppard J. The strength of weeklies. American Journalism Review. 1996 Jul-Aug
    1. Lauterer J. Hold that obit! The report of our death has been greatly exaggerated. Paper presented at: Newspapers and Community-building: Symposium XII; October 12–13, 2006; Oklahoma City, OK.
    1. Bendixen & Associates. The ethnic media in America: The giant hidden in plain sight. San Francisco, CA: New California Media; 2005. Jun,
    1. Cohen E. There’s something in there for everybody: Black newspapers as a resource for health information for African American Women. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly. Under review.
    1. Vercellotti T, Brewer P. "To plead our own cause:" Public opinion toward Black and mainstream news media among African Americans. Journal of Black Studies. 2006;37(2):231–250.
    1. Gilens M. Race and poverty in America: Public misperceptions and the American news media. Public Opinion Quarterly. 1996;60:515–541.
    1. Romer D, Jamieson K, deCoteau N. The treatment of persons of color in local television news: Ethnic blame discourse or realistic group conflict? Communication Research. 1998;25:286–305.
    1. Swain K, Walsh-Childers K, Chance J. Minorities in health stories: How newspapers promote stereotypes, role models, and awareness of social challenges. Paper presented at: Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication; August 10–13, 1996; Anaheim, CA.
    1. Ketchum Public Relations Worldwide. African Americans view the black media as most trustworthy for company and product news: Ketchum Public Relations Worldwide. 1998:1–4.
    1. Pickle K, Quinn S, Brown J. HIV/AIDS coverage in black newspapers, 1991–1996: Implications for health communication and health education. Journal of Health Communication. 2002;7(5):427–444.
    1. Hoffman-Goetz L, Gerlack K, Marino C, Mills S. Cancer coverage and tobacco advertising in African-American women's popular magazines. Journal of Community Health. 1997;22(4):261–270.
    1. Hoffman-Goetz L, Freidman D. Disparities in the coverage of cancer information in ethnic minority and mainstream mass print media. Ethnicity & Disease. 2005;15(2):332–340.
    1. Stryker J, Emmons K, Viswanath K. Uncovering differences across the cancer control continuum: A comparison of ethnic and mainstream cancer newspaper stories. Preventive Medicine. 2007;44(1):20–25.
    1. Wallack L, Dorfman L, Jernigan D, Themba M. Media advocacy and public health: Power for prevention. Newbury Park, CA: Sage; 1993.
    1. McCombs M, Shaw D. The agenda setting function of mass media. Public Opinion Quarterly. 1972;36:176–187.
    1. McCombs M, Shaw D. The evolution of agenda-setting research: 25 years in the marketplace of ideas. Journal of Communication. 1993;43(2):58–68.
    1. Mitchell H, Hirst S, Mitchell J, Staples M, Torcello N. Effect of ethnic media on cervical cancer screening rates. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Public Health. 1997;21(3):265–267.
    1. Brown J, Walsh-Childers K. Effects of media on personal and public health. In: Bryant J, Zillman D, editors. Media effects: Advances in theory and research. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.; 1994. p. 505.
    1. Cohen E, Caburnay C, Luke D, Rodgers S, Cameron G, Kreuter M. Cancer coverage in general audience and black newspapers. Health Communication. In press.
    1. SPSS. v.13. Chicago, IL: SPSS Inc.; 2004.
    1. Riffe D, Aust C, Lacy S. The effectiveness of random, consecutive day and constructed week sampling in newspaper content analysis. Journalism Quarterly. 1993;70(1):133–139.
    1. National Cancer Institute. Bethesda, MD: 2003. HINTS. Health Information National Trends Survey main study interview instrument.
    1. U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Guide to Clinical Preventive Services. 3rd ed. McLean, VA: International Medical Publishing, Inc.; 2002.
    1. Jemal A, Siegel R, Ward E, Murray T, Xu J, Thun M. Cancer statistics, 2007. CA - A Cancer Journal of Clinicians. 2007;57(1):43–66.

Source: PubMed

3
Abonnieren