Cavaca Aline Guio, Emerich Tatiana Breder, Vasconcellos-Silva Paulo Roberto, dos Santos-Neto Edson Theodoro, Oliveira Adauto Emmerich
Post-graduate Program in Public Health, Federal University of Espírito Santo, Vitória, Espírito Santo, Brazil.
National School of Public Health Sérgio Arouca, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2016 Apr 26;10(4):e0004662. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004662. eCollection 2016 Apr.
The aims of the present study were to identify and analyse the Diseases Neglected by the Media (DNMs) via a comparison between the most important health issues to the population of Espírito Santo, Brazil, from the epidemiological perspective (health value) and their effective coverage by the print media, and to analyse the DNMs considering the perspective of key journalists involved in the dissemination of health topics in the state media.
Morbidity and mortality data were collected from official documents and from Health Information Systems. In parallel, the diseases reported in the two major newspapers of Espírito Santo in 2011-2012 were identified from 10,771 news articles. Concomitantly, eight interviews were conducted with reporters from the two newspapers to understand the journalists' reasons for the coverage or neglect of certain health/disease topics.
Quantitatively, the DNMs identified diseases associated with poverty, including tuberculosis, leprosy, schistosomiasis, leishmaniasis, and trachoma. Apart from these, diseases with outbreaks in the period evaluated, including whooping cough and meningitis, some cancers, respiratory diseases, ischaemic heart disease, and stroke, were also seldom addressed by the media. In contrast, dengue fever, acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), diabetes, breast cancer, prostate cancer, tracheal cancer, and bronchial and lung cancers were broadly covered in the period analysed, corroborating the tradition of media disclosure of these diseases. Qualitatively, the DNMs included rare diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), leishmaniasis, Down syndrome, and verminoses. The reasons for the neglect of these topics by the media included the political and economic interests of the newspapers, their editorial line, and the organizational routine of the newsrooms.
Media visibility acts as a strategy for legitimising priorities and contextualizing various realities. Therefore, we propose that the health problems identified should enter the public agenda and begin to be recognized as legitimate demands.
本研究的目的是通过比较巴西圣埃斯皮里图州民众最重要的健康问题(从流行病学角度,即健康价值)及其在平面媒体上的实际报道情况,来识别和分析被媒体忽视的疾病(DNMs),并从参与该州媒体健康话题传播的关键记者的角度分析这些被忽视的疾病。
发病率和死亡率数据收集自官方文件和健康信息系统。同时,从2011年至2012年圣埃斯皮里图州两大报纸的10771篇新闻报道中确定所报道的疾病。与此同时,对这两家报纸的记者进行了8次访谈,以了解记者报道或忽视某些健康/疾病话题的原因。
从数量上看,被媒体忽视的疾病包括与贫困相关的疾病,如结核病、麻风病、血吸虫病、利什曼病和沙眼。除此之外,在评估期间爆发的疾病,如百日咳和脑膜炎、一些癌症、呼吸系统疾病、缺血性心脏病和中风,也很少被媒体报道。相比之下,在分析期间,登革热、获得性免疫缺陷综合征(艾滋病)、糖尿病、乳腺癌、前列腺癌、气管癌以及支气管癌和肺癌得到了广泛报道,这证实了媒体对这些疾病进行披露的传统。从质量上看,被媒体忽视的疾病包括罕见疾病,如肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)、利什曼病、唐氏综合征和蠕虫病。媒体忽视这些话题的原因包括报纸的政治和经济利益、其编辑方针以及新闻编辑部的组织日常工作。
媒体曝光是使优先事项合法化并将各种现实情况背景化的一种策略。因此,我们建议所确定的健康问题应进入公共议程,并开始被视为合理的需求。