Framing the consequences of childhood obesity to increase public support for obesity prevention policy
- PMID: 24028237
- PMCID: PMC3828688
- DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2013.301271
Framing the consequences of childhood obesity to increase public support for obesity prevention policy
Abstract
Objectives: We examined the effects of messages describing consequences of childhood obesity on public attitudes about obesity prevention policy.
Methods: We collected data from 2 nationally representative Internet-based surveys. First, respondents (n = 444) evaluated the strength of 11 messages about obesity's consequences as reasons for government action. Second, we randomly assigned respondents (n = 2494) to a control group or to treatment groups shown messages about obesity consequences. We compared groups' attitudes toward obesity prevention, stratified by political ideology.
Results: Respondents perceived a message about the health consequences of childhood obesity as the strongest rationale for government action; messages about military readiness, bullying, and health care costs were rated particularly strong by conservatives, moderates, and liberals, respectively. A message identifying the consequences of obesity on military readiness increased conservatives' perceptions of seriousness, endorsement of responsibility beyond the individual, and policy support, compared with a control condition.
Conclusions: The public considers several consequences of childhood obesity as strong justification for obesity prevention policy. Activating new or unexpected values in framing a health message could raise the health issue's salience for particular subgroups of the public.
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