Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making. / Nordtug, Maja; Petersen, Line Nybro.

In: SCM Studies in Communication and Media, Vol. 24/year 13, No. issue 2, 27.06.2024, p. 238-260.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nordtug, M & Petersen, LN 2024, 'Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making', SCM Studies in Communication and Media, vol. 24/year 13, no. issue 2, pp. 238-260. https://doi.org/10.5771/2192-4007-2024-2-238

APA

Nordtug, M., & Petersen, L. N. (2024). Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making. SCM Studies in Communication and Media, 24/year 13(issue 2), 238-260. https://doi.org/10.5771/2192-4007-2024-2-238

Vancouver

Nordtug M, Petersen LN. Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making. SCM Studies in Communication and Media. 2024 Jun 27;24/year 13(issue 2):238-260. https://doi.org/10.5771/2192-4007-2024-2-238

Author

Nordtug, Maja ; Petersen, Line Nybro. / Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making. In: SCM Studies in Communication and Media. 2024 ; Vol. 24/year 13, No. issue 2. pp. 238-260.

Bibtex

@article{cc9726e2065c4a1ea408fc06411dd05a,
title = "Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making",
abstract = "This article investigates the mediatization of responsibility in the context ofhealth care decision-making and biological citizenship. The analyzes how Danish parentsnavigate the pervasiveness, polysemy, and media logic of health communication, and howthe authority and legitimacy of certain types of health communication play into their senseof responsibility. The study consists of interviews with 18 Danish parents who were in theprocess of deciding or had recently decided on whether to give their child the human papil-lomavirus (HPV) vaccine. This study draws on mediatization theory, sociological theory ofresponsibility, and research on health communication to illustrate the media-centered con-ditions that shape parents{\textquoteright} decision-making processes. We find that the pervasiveness andpolysemic nature of the information available about the vaccine creates an imperative tounderstand the information while parents also have to navigate the media logic regardingmedia{\textquoteright}s motivation for presenting information about HPV vaccines in certain ways. As aconsequence, parents{\textquoteright} decision-making responsibility as biological citizens is undergoingsignificant changes that place increasing responsibility on the parents in this study",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, mediatization, Health Communication, HPV vaccination, parents, Media use",
author = "Maja Nordtug and Petersen, {Line Nybro}",
year = "2024",
month = jun,
day = "27",
doi = "10.5771/2192-4007-2024-2-238",
language = "Dansk",
volume = "24/year 13",
pages = "238--260",
journal = "Studies in Communication and Media",
issn = "2192-4007",
publisher = "Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft",
number = "issue 2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Navigating health communication: The effects of mediatization on responsibility in complex decision-making

AU - Nordtug, Maja

AU - Petersen, Line Nybro

PY - 2024/6/27

Y1 - 2024/6/27

N2 - This article investigates the mediatization of responsibility in the context ofhealth care decision-making and biological citizenship. The analyzes how Danish parentsnavigate the pervasiveness, polysemy, and media logic of health communication, and howthe authority and legitimacy of certain types of health communication play into their senseof responsibility. The study consists of interviews with 18 Danish parents who were in theprocess of deciding or had recently decided on whether to give their child the human papil-lomavirus (HPV) vaccine. This study draws on mediatization theory, sociological theory ofresponsibility, and research on health communication to illustrate the media-centered con-ditions that shape parents’ decision-making processes. We find that the pervasiveness andpolysemic nature of the information available about the vaccine creates an imperative tounderstand the information while parents also have to navigate the media logic regardingmedia’s motivation for presenting information about HPV vaccines in certain ways. As aconsequence, parents’ decision-making responsibility as biological citizens is undergoingsignificant changes that place increasing responsibility on the parents in this study

AB - This article investigates the mediatization of responsibility in the context ofhealth care decision-making and biological citizenship. The analyzes how Danish parentsnavigate the pervasiveness, polysemy, and media logic of health communication, and howthe authority and legitimacy of certain types of health communication play into their senseof responsibility. The study consists of interviews with 18 Danish parents who were in theprocess of deciding or had recently decided on whether to give their child the human papil-lomavirus (HPV) vaccine. This study draws on mediatization theory, sociological theory ofresponsibility, and research on health communication to illustrate the media-centered con-ditions that shape parents’ decision-making processes. We find that the pervasiveness andpolysemic nature of the information available about the vaccine creates an imperative tounderstand the information while parents also have to navigate the media logic regardingmedia’s motivation for presenting information about HPV vaccines in certain ways. As aconsequence, parents’ decision-making responsibility as biological citizens is undergoingsignificant changes that place increasing responsibility on the parents in this study

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - mediatization

KW - Health Communication

KW - HPV vaccination

KW - parents

KW - Media use

U2 - 10.5771/2192-4007-2024-2-238

DO - 10.5771/2192-4007-2024-2-238

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 24/year 13

SP - 238

EP - 260

JO - Studies in Communication and Media

JF - Studies in Communication and Media

SN - 2192-4007

IS - issue 2

ER -

ID: 396012979