scholarly journals Media contribution to violence against health workers in China: a content analysis study of 124 online media reports

The Lancet ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 386 ◽  
pp. S81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Wu ◽  
Therese Hesketh ◽  
Xu-Dong Zhou
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marewa Glover ◽  
Robin Shepherd ◽  
Hamed Nazari ◽  
Kyro Selket

Robberies of New Zealand convenience stores for tobacco products spiked between 2016 and 2017. According to media reports, many robberies involved the use of weapons and resulted in injury to retailers. We conducted a content analysis of all online media articles containing commentary about these robberies, published between 2014 and 2019, to identify the perceived causes of the increase in robberies for tobacco and remedies implemented or demanded. The commentators in the articles were categorized into three groups of stakeholders: elites, grassroots, and interest groups. Overall, there was a mismatch between perceiving the primary cause to be socially and economically determined and suggesting solutions that were mostly situational shop level changes or tertiary prevention strategies, such as more and harsher policing. A further mismatch was that existing policing policy was not adapted to balance the perverse consequences of the tobacco excise tax increases. Early commentators tended to deflect blame away from their own sector. Later commentary converged to agree that the high tobacco excise tax was a critical causal factor.


2021 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 186-207
Author(s):  
Norizzati Saifuddin ◽  
◽  
Hasmah Zanuddin ◽  

Media plays an important role in illustrating the issue of interpersonal violence. Online media such as news portals and social media platforms are highly used in spreading the information virtually and digitally. However, the issue of interpersonal violence is still growing and has recently shown a significant spike. There are not many studies analyzing the exchange of information between these platforms digitally due to online news portals, which are operated by traditional media, and social media being treated as different entities. Yet, real-time posting may lead to an exchange of contents as they follow each other's agenda. A study on intermedia agenda-setting (IAS) - through issues published, agenda-setter, and sentiment - will enable us to understand how agenda setting plays a role in illustrating the issue of interpersonal violence. A content analysis study was conducted on six selected online media, consisting of mainstream and independent news portals and social media. A total of 815 samples of online news, articles and social media postings from five distinct issues were extracted to investigate the content and every 40 relevant comments from each news item were selected to identify how public opinion the portrayal of the issue in these selected online media. In-depth interview was conducted to eight field experts to gain clarification of the result from the content analysis study. Chi-square analysis on three hypotheses were significantly associated. Results revealed that public officials played a major role as the agenda setter. The Star which represents mainstream online news led in setting the agenda on interpersonal violence issues while Facebook which represents social media followed next in setting the agenda. During the process of intermedia agenda-setting, negative sentiments were hugely expressed and exchanged which indicated the uneasiness, feeling disturbed and dissatisfaction on the interpersonal violence cases, which in the end resulted in the sharing and exchanging of news between mainstream news portals and social media. The agenda on social media was set by the public. This confirmed the effects of the flow of elite--non-elite-elite on IAS. Hence, this study contributed to the understanding of the agenda pattern used that also coexisted in different types of media which were created through the intermedia process. Keywords: Intermedia agenda setting, interpersonal violence, mainstream online news, independent news portal, social media.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Habtemariam Abate Meshesha ◽  
Adugnaw Birhane ◽  
Mulugeta Tamire ◽  
Molla Gashu Diress ◽  
Walelign Worku

Abstract Background: about 55 million children under the age of five suffer from acute malnutrition; 19 million of these suffer from the most serious type of severe acute malnutrition. Every year, 3.1 million children die of malnutrition. However; evidence in the study area is rare. Thus, exploring barriers that delay acute malnutrition care of under-5 children qualitatively to have for detailed understanding and evidence-based interventions in a holistic approach is vital.Objectives: The objective aimed to explore the barriers that delay acute malnutrition treatment services among parents/caregivers having under-five children from June 01/2020 to August 28/2020.Methods: A descriptive qualitative content analysis study with a purposive sampling technique were employed to conduct in-depth interview among parents/caregivers, and key informant interview among health workers, health administrators and community health development army leader. The data was collected by two trained research assistants, 6 parents/caregivers for in-depth interviews, and 16 participants for the key informant interview with observations of the practice. Open code version 4.02 software was used for data management during analysis. Coding and codebook were prepared. There were simultaneous data collection and initial analysis to grasp what was said and how it was said by memoing, verbatim transcription was undertaken. All of the audio-records were transcribed verbatim and translated from Amharic into English by an experienced translator for analysis. We provided both the transcriber and translator with a brief description of the research scope and objectives of the data to enhance their understanding of the subject matter. The transcripts and translations were cross-checked for consistency. A qualitative content analysis method was hired to conduct the analysis process. Result: Parents faced lack of health-seeking behaviours: lack of awareness, perceptions of illness behaviours, poverty, workload, and traditional beliefs; poor infrastructures and difficult geographical setup, the travel distance, inaccessibility of the service, and lack of organized treatment facility, COVID-19 pandemic, lack of sustainable interventions, lack of skilled and committed health worker, lack of health worker training, discontinuity of stock supply and long waiting time to receive the treatment were identified as the barrier for early prevention and treatment of under-5 child acute malnutrition. Conclusion: The health education and promotion on social behavior change communication (SBCC) had to be strengthened, and monitored along with health workers' skill development and successive training. There should be strong and close monitoring and evaluation of the impacts of the service provision and inter-sectoral collaborations among different sectors. It also needs to evaluate the impacts of projects in the area on SBCC for AMTS.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-165
Author(s):  
Tina Askanius

This article is based on a case study of the online media practices of the militant neo-Nazi organization the Nordic Resistance Movement, currently the biggest and most active extreme-right actor in Scandinavia. I trace a recent turn to humor, irony, and ambiguity in their online communication and the increasing adaptation of stylistic strategies and visual aesthetics of the Alt-Right inspired by online communities such as 4chan, 8chan, Reddit, and Imgur. Drawing on a visual content analysis of memes ( N = 634) created and circulated by the organization, the analysis explores the place of humor, irony, and ambiguity across these cultural expressions of neo-Nazism and how ideas, symbols, and layers of meaning travel back and forth between neo-Nazi and Alt-right groups within Sweden today.


2021 ◽  
pp. 053331642110076
Author(s):  
Christian Peter Endler ◽  
Angelika Enzian ◽  
Günter Dietrich ◽  
Stefan Schacht ◽  
Gabriele Sachs

What perceptions do group participants have about silent observers, what transferences are involved, what function can the listeners have for the group? In an anonymous survey and evaluation based on content analysis, almost all participants reported positive, and two thirds also negative impressions and perceptions. Observers were perceived as being familiar or supportive and as threatening or constraining to an approximately equal extent. There was no outright demonization or perception of a divide between the group leader(s) and the observers, as described in the older literature. Group participants also appear to perceive observers as representatives of their own superego, which are ‘silenced’.


Author(s):  
Emmanuel Nii-Boye Quarshie ◽  
Joseph Osafo ◽  
Charity S. Akotia ◽  
Jennifer Peprah

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document