Davies Christina R, Pescud Melanie T, Clifford Rhonda, McGrath Richard, Thomson Annie, Jeffrey Mia, Stoneham Melissa, Pikora Terri, Wright Peter, Girdler Sonya, Baldassar Loretta, Clift Stephen
Centre for Arts, Mental Health and Wellbeing, School of Allied Health & School of Humanities, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia.
School of Allied Health, University of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia.
Front Public Health. 2025 Jun 26;13:1594846. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1594846. eCollection 2025.
This study describes and evaluates (GAGMH), a groundbreaking, population-level, arts-mental health promotion media campaign. The objectives of the campaign (Wave 1) were to increase brand awareness, comprehension, and agreement with the tagline and empower the general population to form an intention to engage in the Arts for their mental wellbeing.
The campaign ran from August to September 2024 (4 weeks), cost AUD$198,965 (23% creative and 77% media/advertising distribution), and targeted the Western Australian (WA) general population aged 18-65 years, all genders, in both metropolitan and regional areas. The campaign was distributed through a variety of platforms, channels, visual, audio, and static assets. To gauge the success of the campaign, a process evaluation and (short-term) outcome evaluation were conducted by sourcing online analytics and conducting an online survey of the campaign target group ( = 661).
Overall, campaign reach and frequency were optimal and met set targets. Campaign website engagement substantially increased from baseline (7,505 to 53,810 events 1 month after the campaign). Advertising cost-per-reach was effective and ranged from $0 for free/organic media to $0.10 for radio. For paid media channels, the highest reach (948,106 people) and best cost-per-reach ($0.02) were delivered by Meta (Facebook and Instagram).Measured as both (1) a proportion of total respondents and (2) a sub-set analysis of each preceding level in the cognitive impact hierarchy, post-campaign, one-in-four respondents were aware of . This is comparatively high for a new tagline and health campaign without TV advertising. Overall, comprehension was satisfactory. Agreement and intention to act on the message were high and double that of comparison Western Australian health promotion campaigns.
Study findings indicate the GAGMH campaign was successful. If funded, future waves of the campaign could build on Wave 1 to reinforce message awareness, increase understanding of GAGMH concepts, focus more on the , and extend the outcome evaluation by measuring behavioral action. The information contained in this study is useful to Public Health, Mental Health, and Arts-Health professionals in the planning, implementation, and evaluation of future arts-mental health promotion strategies and campaigns.
本研究描述并评估了“艺术促进心理健康运动”(GAGMH),这是一项具有开创性的、针对全体人群的艺术促进心理健康的媒体宣传活动。该活动(第一阶段)的目标是提高品牌知名度、对标语的理解和认同,并促使普通大众形成参与艺术活动以促进心理健康的意愿。
该活动于2024年8月至9月开展(为期4周),成本为198,965澳元(23%用于创意,77%用于媒体/广告投放),目标受众为西澳大利亚州(WA)18 - 65岁的普通大众,不分性别,涵盖城市和农村地区。活动通过多种平台、渠道、视觉、音频和静态资产进行传播。为评估活动的成效,通过获取在线分析数据并对活动目标群体(n = 661)进行在线调查,开展了过程评估和(短期)结果评估。
总体而言,活动的覆盖范围和传播频率达到最佳状态,符合设定目标。活动网站的参与度从基线大幅提高(活动后1个月,从7,505次事件增至53,810次)。每获得一次曝光的广告成本较为合理,免费/自然媒体的成本为0美元,广播媒体为0.10美元。对于付费媒体渠道,Meta(Facebook和Instagram)的曝光量最高(948,106人),每获得一次曝光的成本最低(0.02美元)。在活动后,(1)从总受访者的比例以及(2)认知影响层次结构中每个先前水平的子集分析来看,四分之一的受访者知晓该标语。对于一个没有电视广告的新标语和健康宣传活动而言,这一比例相对较高。总体而言,理解程度令人满意。对该信息的认同度和采取行动的意愿较高,是西澳大利亚州同类健康促进活动的两倍。
研究结果表明GAGMH活动取得了成功。如果获得资金支持,活动的后续阶段可以在第一阶段的基础上,加强信息认知度,增进对GAGMH概念的理解,更多地关注[具体内容缺失],并通过衡量行为行动来扩展结果评估。本研究中包含的信息对公共卫生、心理健康以及艺术与健康领域的专业人员在规划、实施和评估未来的艺术促进心理健康战略和活动方面具有参考价值。