TY - JOUR AU - Reifegerste, Doreen AU - Wiedicke, Annemarie PY - 2021/03/26 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Quality (Health Coverage) JF - DOCA - Database of Variables for Content Analysis JA - DOCA VL - 1 IS - 2 SE - News/Journalism: Variables for Content Analysis DO - 10.34778/2a UR - https://www.hope.uzh.ch/doca/article/view/2a SP - AB - <p>To judge the quality of the media coverage of health information<em>, </em><em>research mostly focuses on ten criteria: </em>adequately discussion of costs, quantification of benefits, adequately explanation and quantification of potential harms, comparison of the new idea with existing alternatives, independence of sources and discussion of potential conflicts of interests, avoidance of disease mongering, review of methodology or the quality of the evidence, discussion of the true novelty and availability of the idea, approach or product as well as giving information that go beyond a news release (Schwitzer, 2008, 2014; Smith et al., 2005). Other quality dimensions applied in content analyses of health news coverage are diversity, completeness, relevance, understandability and objectiveness (Reineck, 2014; Reineck &amp; Hölig, 2013).</p><p>These criteria are increasingly relevant as people use online health information more frequently and in addition to the information from their physician for medical decision making (Wang, Xiu, &amp; Shahzad, 2019). Thus, analyzing the quality of health content in the media coverage becomes even more relevant. As Schwitzer (2017) points out, there is a variety of quality problems due to hurried, incomplete, poorly researched news.</p><p>To measure quality, the content of health news coverage can be compared to content of the original research paper (e.g., Ashorkhani et al., 2012) or the quality of media content is continuously judged by journalist, medical experts or independent organizations such as <em>HealthNewsReview</em> with respect to different criteria (e.g., Schwitzer, 2008; Selvaraj et al., 2014).</p><p><strong><em>Field of application/theoretical foundation: </em></strong></p><p>Online health information, medical decision making, journalism studies</p><p><strong><em>References/combination with other methods:</em></strong></p><p>Focus group discussions with journalists, editors-in-chief and news gatekeepers (Ashorkhani et al., 2012), focus group discussions with consumers of health information (Marshall &amp; Williams, 2006)</p><p><strong><em>Example studies:</em></strong></p><p>Anhäuser &amp; Wormer (2012); <span style="font-family: 'Noto Sans', 'Noto Kufi Arabic', -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, 'Segoe UI', Roboto, Oxygen-Sans, Ubuntu, Cantarell, 'Helvetica Neue', sans-serif;">Schwitzer (2008); </span>Wormer (2014); <span style="font-family: 'Noto Sans', 'Noto Kufi Arabic', -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, 'Segoe UI', Roboto, Oxygen-Sans, Ubuntu, Cantarell, 'Helvetica Neue', sans-serif;">Reineck &amp; Hölig (2013); </span>Reineck (2014)</p><p> </p><p><strong>Information on Reineck &amp; Hölig, 2013</strong></p><p><strong>Authors: </strong>Dennis Reineck, Sascha Hölig</p><p><strong>Research question: </strong>Which factors contribute to the quality of health journalism?</p><p><strong>Object of analysis: </strong>Sample of all health-related articles in four German newspapers: <em>Süddeutsche Zeitung</em> (<em>n </em>= 167), <em>Die Welt</em> (n = 426), <em>Frankfurter Rundschau</em> (<em>n </em>= 219) and <em>die tageszeitung</em> (<em>n </em>= 84)</p><p><strong>Time frame of analysis: </strong>March, 1, 2010 to February, 28, 2011</p><p><strong>Info</strong><strong> about variables</strong></p><p><strong>Variables</strong>: Variables defining five dimensions of quality for health-related newspaper articles, deduction of a quality index: coding of 0 to 100 points for each indicator of the different variables, deduction of a quality index for each article based on these points</p><p><strong>Level of analysis</strong>: news article</p><div style="overflow-x: auto;"><table><tbody><tr><td class="t"><p>Quality dimension</p></td><td class="t"><p>Variable</p></td><td class="t"><p>Indicator(s)</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t" rowspan="3"><p>Diversity (<em>rH</em>= 0.78)</p></td><td class="t"><p>Quantitative diversity</p></td><td class="t"><p>Length of the article</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Source diversity</p></td><td class="t"><p>Number of sources</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Opinion diversity</p></td><td class="t"><p>Discussion of contrary opinions</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t" rowspan="3"><p>Completeness (<em>rH</em>= 0.86)</p></td><td class="t"><p>Journalistic completeness and scientific completeness, risks</p></td><td class="t"><p>For diseases: information about prevention, symptoms and remedies</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Scientific completeness</p></td><td class="t"><p>For research studies: information about method, sample and results</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Risks</p></td><td class="t"><p>For treatment options: addressing of risks and side effects</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t" rowspan="3"><p>Relevance (<em>rH</em>= 0.85)</p></td><td class="t"><p>Source credibility</p></td><td class="t"><p>Sources with the highest reputation</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Usefulness</p></td><td class="t"><p>Take-home-messages, references to additional information</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Newsworthiness</p></td><td class="t"><p>News factors (e.g., topicality)</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t" rowspan="4"><p>Understandability (<em>rH</em>= 0.86)</p></td><td class="t"><p>Simplicity</p></td><td class="t"><p>Simplicity vs. complexity of language</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Structure</p></td><td class="t"><p>Well-structured vs. inadequately structured presentation</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Conciseness</p></td><td class="t"><p>Concise vs. circuitous presentation</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t"><p>Storytelling</p></td><td class="t"><p>Storytelling vs. matter-of-fact presentation</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t b" rowspan="2"><p>Objectiveness (<em>rH</em>= 0.95)</p></td><td class="t"><p>Emotionalization</p></td><td class="t"><p>Emotional language</p></td></tr><tr><td class="t b"><p>Dramatization</p></td><td class="t b"><p>Dramatization of information</p></td></tr></tbody></table></div><p> </p><p> </p><p><strong>References</strong></p><p>Anhäuser, M., &amp; Wormer, H. (2012). A question of quality: Criteria for the evaluation of science and medical reporting and testing their applicability. <em>PCST 2012 Book of Papers: Quality, Honesty and Beauty in Science and Technology Communication</em>. http://www.medien-doktor.de/medizin/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/downloads/2014/04/Paper-Florenz.pdf</p><p>Ashorkhani, M., Gholami, J., Maleki, K., Nedjat, S., Mortazavi, J., &amp; Majdzadeh, R. (2012). Quality of health news disseminated in the print media in developing countries: A case study in Iran. <em>BMC Public Health</em>, <em>12</em>, 627. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-627</p><p>Marshall, L. A., &amp; Williams, D. (2006). Health information: does quality count for the consumer? <em>Journal of Librarianship and Information Science</em>, <em>38</em>(3), 141–156. https://doi.org/10.1177/0961000606066575</p><p>Reineck, D. (2014). Placebo oder Aufklärung mit Wirkpotenzial? Eine Diagnose der Qualität der Gesundheitsberichterstattung in überregionalen Tageszeitungen. In V. Lilienthal (Ed.), <em>Qualität im Gesundheitsjournalismus: Perspektiven aus Wissenschaft und Praxis </em>(Vol. 325, pp. 39–60). Springer VS. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-02427-7_3</p><p>Reineck, D., &amp; Hölig, S. (2013). Patient Gesundheitsjournalismus: Eine inhaltsanalytische Untersuchung der Qualität in überregionalen Tageszeitungen. In C. Rossmann &amp; M. R. Hastall (Eds.), <em>Medien + Gesundheit: Band 6. Medien und Gesundheitskommunikation: Befunde, Entwicklungen, Herausforderungen </em>(1st ed., pp. 19–31). Nomos.</p><p>Schwitzer, G. (2008). How do US journalists cover treatments, tests, products, and procedures? An evaluation of 500 stories. <em>PLoS Medicine</em>, <em>5</em>(5), e95.</p><p>Schwitzer, G. (2014). A guide to reading health care news stories. <em>JAMA Internal Medicine</em>, <em>174</em>(7), 1183–1186. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.1359</p><p>Schwitzer, G. (2017). Pollution of health news. <em>BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.)</em>, <em>356</em>, j1262. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j1262</p><p>Selvaraj, S., Borkar, D. S., &amp; Prasad, V. (2014). Media coverage of medical journals: Do the best articles make the news? <em>PloS One</em>, <em>9</em>(1), e85355. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085355</p><p>Smith, D. E., Wilson, A. J., &amp; Henry, D. A. (2005). Monitoring the quality of medical news reporting: Early experience with media doctor. <em>The Medical Journal of Australia</em>, <em>183</em>(4), 190–193.</p> ER -