“Body bags ready”: Print media coverage of avian influenza in Australia ()
1. INTRODUCTION
The first outbreak of human disease from Avian influenza A (H5N1) was reported in 1997 in Hong Kong [1]. From late 2003, more human cases were confirmed across Asia and Africa; and the virus increasingly captured the world’s attention because influenza A is the only strain that has ever been shown to have the capacity to cause a pandemic [2]. H5N1 can be spread by migratory birds and mechanical means (e.g., from one farm to another on the soil captured by tractor tires). It can be transmitted from birds to mammals (including pigs, seals, whales, mink, ferrets, tigers, leopards, stone marten and domestic cats), and it can be transmitted from birds to humans [3,4].
In May 2006, the discovery of H5N1 infection within an extended family in north Sumatra presented the possibility of the first “extended chain of human transmission” of the virus [5]. Indonesia, Australia’s closest northern neighbor, reported the highest number of human cases in 2006, 82% of these cases were fatal [6].
With more incident reports of the virus infecting humans, H5N1 began to be categorized as a global public health threat. Concern about a possible pandemic was based on a number of factors. First, given the wideranging flight paths of migratory birds, the virus had the potential to be spread to domestic poultry in a number of countries. Second, there was concern that the H5N1 virus could mutate rapidly when it existed within a large contained domestic flock. Third, the close contact that occurs in many Asian countries between humans and domestic poultry provided numerous opportunities for the virus to infect humans through direct contact with infected poultry or surfaces that were contaminated by infected birds. Fourth, the lack of a vaccine combined with the lack of natural immunity to H5N1 amongst the world’s population created the opportunity for a pandemic to occur [7]. Fifth, the avian influenza outbreak in north Sumatra raised significant concerns about whether countries were prepared to respond to an avian influenza outbreak and capable of doing so in a manner that would result in the control of local outbreaks [5].
Media Coverage of Avian Influenza and Previous Health Crises
Throughout 2006 there was considerable media coverage of, and public discussion about, a possible avian influenza pandemic. Public and government concern and fear about an avian influenza pandemic may have been significantly affected by the media’s continual reference to the 1918 Spanish Influenza pandemic, in which an estimated 20 - 50 million people died.
The media are important sources of health information to many people. For example, in the mid-1990s, an Australian survey of 3000 women found that “the media” were the most common source of advice about breast cancer [8]. A US study of women’s mammography screening behaviors found that doctor’s advice accounted for 30% of the variance over time while media coverage accounted for 13% [9]. Thus, for many people the media have the ability to influence their perceptions of the seriousness of avian influenza, their susceptibility to it and the effectiveness of possible health-protective behaviors.
It is often argued that the media sensationalizes health crises; thus, media information should be treated with skepticism. This was illustrated in an article in Informed Voice magazine (a natural health publication), which advised readers:
“Several years ago, SARS was the virus that was going to kill millions worldwide! Before it had even been identified properly, government and the media were spreading panic far and wide. Fortunately for us, and embarrassing for the doom-sayers, SARS was a non-event. Never giving up however, we are now being subjected to the Avian Influenza fear campaign” [10].
Indeed, the media was subjected to a large amount of criticism in relation to its coverage of SARS, even being accused of manufacturing threats to the public’s health and well-being that “draw upon past and present cultural myths of dangerous ‘others’ and contribute to unwarranted public fear, intolerance, and distrust” [11]. An analysis of the media coverage of SARS in UK newspapers revealed that the media depiction of SARS changed from an impending, significant threat to one that was totally contained within a 3-month period [12]. One wonders if the residents of Toronto, Canada were equally critical, however, given that the SARS outbreak that occurred there resulted in loss of life and had a major economic impact on the city.
Leading medical journals cautioned about the risk of panic and inappropriate behavioral responses as a result of fear of avian influenza even before a pandemic emerges [13], and emphasized the need for appropriate risk communication strategies to inform the public without causing panic [14]. For example, fear of avian influenza damaged poultry sales in Thailand and China and resulted in the inappropriate stockpiling of antiviral drugs among individuals in more affluent countries [13].
Protection Motivation Theory (PMT) was postulated by Rogers in 1975 as a model for examining the effect of fear on an individual’s behavior [15]. The original theory was further developed re-addressing the impact of persuasive communications on behavior change and focusing on the cognitive processes that influence and predict behavior [16]. This study used PMT components as a conceptual framework to explore how the Australian media portrayed the health risk of avian influenza by reviewing newspaper stories published during 2006.
2. METHOD
2.1. Search Strategy
For the period 1 January 2006 to 31 December 2006 major Australian national and metropolitan daily broadsheet and tabloid newspapers available through Factiva. com were searched (n = 20). A full-text search was conducted using the string: “bird flu” OR “avian influenza” OR bird near 3 flu OR bird near 3 influenza OR avian near 3 flu OR avian near 3 influenza OR Tamiflu OR Relenza OR antiviral OR “anti-viral” OR “anti viral” OR h5n1 OR superbug OR “super bug” OR superflu OR “super flu” and the results (metadata and full article) were imported into an Endnote Reference Library for analysis (n = 1649).
The news items were initially screened for relevancy and multiple versions. All “off-topic” articles were immediately excluded. In circumstances where two versions of a news item existed only one version was retained for coding. We also did not include meeting announcements, articles that described other topics and only briefly mentioned “bird flu” in less than two lines (e.g. political stories), articles that just used “bird flu” in an adjectival manner (e.g. “in these bird-flu-phobic days”) and stories primarily financially focused.
2.2. Article Coding
Documents were analyzed using a coding framework developed from a variety of sources. The coding scheme by Washer [12] was examined and literature on media analysis of other health issues was reviewed to assist in the construction of appropriate themes.
We devised three main categories for the coding process: articles were coded for the presence of themes related to 1) “vulnerability” or the likelihood of avian influenza occurring; 2) the “severity” or seriousness of the avian influenza threat; and 3) “adaptive response” or the perceived effectiveness of actions to avoid infection. A single article could be coded as presenting one or more themes under one or more of the main categories. Any articles that were unable to be coded under the model were assigned “other”. In addition to the themes, articles were coded for representations of spokespersons (e.g., Medical, Non-Medical), article type (e.g., general news, feature, opinion/editorial) and “panic” language.
Documents were coded by two authors and discrepancies of analysis were discussed until mutual agreement was reached.
The frequency of reporting was higher in the first five months, coinciding with reports of the first human cases in Turkey, Iraq, Egypt and Cambodia, new cases and fatalities in Indonesia and China, and the increasing incidence in animals across Europe and Africa.
3. RESULTS
3.1. Amount of Coverage
A total of 850 articles were identified and analyzed (Table 1) with 72% accounting for general news articles and 12% for feature articles (i.e., presenting more of a story than just facts of new cases). Arts and entertain-
Table 1. Newspaper titles, hit rate and total inclusions.
ment reviews (e.g., “Killer Bird Flu special”, “Flu Time Bomb”, etc.), business stories, letters to the editor and other types of articles comprised the remainder of the dataset (Table 2).
3.2. Thematic Coverage
The identified articles were examined for references to themes depicting 1) “vulnerability”, or the likelihood of avian influenza occurring; 2) “severity” or seriousness of the avian influenza threat; and 3) adaptive response or actions taken to avoid infection.
Table 3 presents the frequencies of articles that were coded with themes depicting vulnerability. The focus was on reporting the incidence of both human (46%) and animal (33%) cases around the world. Coverage of scientific concerns on the potential for the virus to mutate (which is necessary for human-to-human transmission) accounted for 13% of stories. Avian influenza was reported as a potential threat to Australia in 24% of the articles.